HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-03-25 - Newport Harbor Daily Pilot• ..
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MONDAY, MARCH 2S. )968
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N.Y. Stocks
JEN CENTS
Becket Firm Seeii aS Civic Center Architect
Ships Hit
In Fog Off
Pt. Fermin
Two larl• ships colided in heavy
fof two mllea ott Point Fermin about
7 o'clock thia mornlng but manafed
t Ump U.O neMby barborl at Loog
Beach and Loe Angeles.
At Jeut one crewman waa injured
and sveeuated to a bolpjt&l, the U.S.
CoUt Oard ltdd. Tbt victim'• name,
the utme ol bis lnjurie.c and bls
condiUon.,... M&Jm med l ahly
known.
A Coast Guardman JdeDtitied the
vesMls U tbt 1%,GMon tanker AS.·
tic Trader. • .. nute to Loac ...
from Por1Sad, ad tbe 7,,..._
freiebt« Sttel Deaiper, ".-.
frCllll Lalt...,. .... ,..., .....
Tl.le taUlr' •• ' ..... ..,,...
...... reported tdbll ....... .
The rbip ... tam under tow and
safely reached Ancbarage A at Loe
AngeleJ Harbor &bclPt two bourt afteJ'
the collll1on, el!lc:t• said.
A C.0Mt Guard reaene veuti at
the scene reported the tanker wae
loaded with di~ oil and caaoHne.
The rescue 1hlp lighted 1ome oil
spillage, but said Jt appeared to be
only a minor amount.
OffldalJ 1aid the second ship
evidently med lta own po'Wer in If'·
riving at Berth 201 in Long Beach
Harbor. 1bt freighter was en route
to San Francisco and was not carrying
any cargo. according to the C~t
Guard.
Beach Cities
Hit by W orst
Attack of Smog
P7eab air enthusiasts today w e r ,.
still recowring from their Sunday vis-
it to Newport Beach where they were
erpoMd to one of the worst smog at·
*kl Jn recent memory.
An etdmatect 45,cnl people showed
\Q> wltb IUll tan loUon and beach blan·
teta, onl1 to find that the sun stayed
partially bidden behind a dense. yel-
lowish cover of ozone clouds.
Llfesuacd tosan Lockabey said s..
ttirday'; crowd numbered mound
25,000. Both days were marked by
flat sea ad nrf, with water temper·
aturel bo'nlrinl at a brisk 5e dell'ftl,
he saJd. Air temperaturet were unable to do ~n1 bett.r thaJt • decrees dther day.
\n umteady wind putted aloq from
the nortlnNlt at • tD JO tnota. ~ a retuJt of tbe ddDy water and
f1at nrf. LGChbeJ ;aid llfepardi '\a4 few clink1ilMlil Ill monitorlnl the ~. It. -......, tint aJdl and •
lQPk of IOilt ddlltl• eccounted for
.. weeked'• _...., )oC. be said.
Lynda's Husband
Now at Pendleton
report *> ~ council from tbe dty'a
Clvfc °"*"'sit. Selection Oommlttee.
Becket's Jib lnltiaD)' would be to
help the CGmmlttee determine & tmal
lite 9electioa. 'lbret &re DOW llDdier-
comi41ratioD. The pre.mt dtJ ball·
locatiDe ii SDOQg them.
Tbe pllnning..a.rdlltectural firm was
one of more than a score considettd
during the past ~ar by the com-
mittee,~ cnafrmla la City Couo·
cllmm Boward Rogers.
Other committee membert are Vice
Mayor Dcnen Manhall.. Councilman
Robert Sbe1toll and plaming OOim·
mtldmen Jcm J~ and Willlllit
C!d. .
Coondl~n Lindaley p.._.. •
dbted ~ moming he would ..
alone with the council'• ccnmlttte
memben ~ votiDC approval ol .. Becket~'J.W ....
be four YOte1 -1 ~to elft'I. "I'm~ ttle comm....-.ldilj
come up wiUI Welton Becket .._., ...
said Pan<1111. "It's an ~
capible, tl&PJy qualified firm." i City Manattir Harvey Hurlburt 14
Becht WOUid be paid a fee of '10
for ita CG111nltlng services.
''The ~tint's task will be to
Payda9 Down at the Club
Jim Phillipe, president o( the Cost.a Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club.
handa checke to Debbie Cottle, 14, and Brian O'Connor, 11 , as N!p-
resentatives of Girls' Club and Bors' Club. Lions are already plan-
ning 1968 Costa Mesa Fish Fry to benefit area youth organizations.
The June 1·2 event should net $27.000 to be donated to youth groupi;.
Bolton Scores Tidelands
Fee, Steps Up Campaign
Newport Beach City Council CM·
didate Donald A. Botk>a today stepped
up his campaign to win the Distric1
7 (ee&t Corona del Mar\ seat 1way
from incumbent Undsley Parsons.
Bolton voiced a total objection to
a proposed tidelandt uae fee.
The controversial pilll has kept U\e
community debating it for months.
Among 1bose in favor of the fee in
prindple is C-Ouncilman Partona.
Bolton, a merchant and leader In
Corona del Mar yoath activities.
portnayed any tidelancli t. as leading
to a "future lnv•sion ol. ~n t.IU·
atioo,' legal loopholea, and venturing
Into ~ onbOWD wffbout benefit ol
either light 91' <."Ompdl."
He declared:
"Tbe very idea is, in ltaelf.
d.ixrimlnatory 'taution' a a a J n 1 t
dU1.enl wbo are occupyt,ng the b1lbelt
aueument areas of !he community."
Under ParlODS' Jt:adeudlip. a apecial
City Council ccmmitttt bas evolnd
a plan to collect revenue from usen
al Udelaodl. Panonl bu 9'>t!nt hun-
~ al boun stud.Ytaa lbt lnue.
ad CODCludtd the city mlllt in1Uate
a tideland.'! fee or watch the statt
stti> 1n and do it for them.
TI<2elands are public property held
in trust Cor the state by municipalit.Je~
The tidelands of Newport Beach havP
been converted into lush bayfront
home. and water's edge bu1inesses.
PanJOllll says unless the city shows
the state that tidelaods users arP
paylnt a fee for the benefit of thP
public property, the state will start
1dmlnditering IUCh a fee sdledule.
But Bolto11 today responded: "Oner
started, we mJght look In the future
to water-ON fees, aewer-use fee~.
trash collection 'fees' and on and on
mt on "1 m ..U.U M'les ol cori·
bived reWIJIOe rali.tng llCbemes al
"9ctlnf an ol the c:lttJml ol Newport
Beectl.''
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market continutd to wort irTegularh
loft?' late th11 aitemoon in sl~
tradJni. fSee quotaUoas, Pa,ea 24-25 \
find out whether the civic cent'er com·
plex we llffd would be appropriate
to the various sites under study, In
t.errns o! sue ~s well as neigbborbOod
impact factors," Hurlburt explained.
He emphasir.ed:
.. Most of the study effort probably
will be sperit on the t.slbillty of using
0. present city ball location. That
wiU be the most complicated.''
Two other Ii• under study are on
Irvine Co. landa east of the upper bay.
()fl(> is near Fuhion Lsland at the in·
tersection of East Coast H1gbway and
MacArtbur Boulevard. The other ia
along Jamboree Road overlooking tM
Upper B1y just north or the Newport· er Inn.
A fourth SIU! ~~rat months ago
was listed by the Slte Select.ion Com-
mittee. But it has since been pegged
by the Irvine C-0. for apartmeot house
development. It Is also ftSt of Jam-
boree Road, near the San Joaquin in·
tersectlon.
In addition to hiring an arcbltl!c-tural consult.mt. councilmen tonight
will act oo a commtttee recommend&·
tion to contract for an economic COO·
sultant.
Economic JWieearch AssociallM
CERA) ol Los Ang,eles is pardcular·
ly qualHi«I, &C(:ord1ng to tbe commJt.
tee report, "on the basis of tu V'flrY
favorable experience and reputation
in Orange County, having worked re-
cently Cor county govenune21t and tbe
lrvme Compaiy, amoog ot.bera.'•
ERA's job, for which 1t would ~
ceive a $9,000 fee . would be to deter·
mine the effects of civic center devel·
opment on land uses and vatuee In
the slUTOlmding neighborhood. It
woold also come up with land value
appraisals oo each of the three lite1.
Tanks Ambush Gls
Reds S urprise Cav alry men Near Hue
SAIGON CUPll -North Vietnamese
troops who had pushed a tank column
JS miles deep into the northern part
of South Vietnam today ambushed
a column of U. S. air cavalrymen
20 miles west of Hue. The Americans
suffered .. moderate" losses.
"Tanks! Tanks! They've got tanks!"
screamed the U. S. soldiers at the
bead of the column, cut off in a
ravine as the cavalrymen were
pushing westward toward a com·
munist stronghold in the A Shau
valley.
The American unit fought back with
a!l the firepower it could bring to
bear on the Commurusts' tanks. which
were malting their deepest penetration
yet of South Vietnam, and was able
to puJI free.
UPI photographer Charles Eg·
gleston. himseU caught in the trap,
said the hidden tanks were Unng with
a strange "whoomp! wboomp!" but
he was unable to estimate the size
Of their guns.
A U.S. military spokesman aatd the
American unit suffered "moderate"
losses in the tank ambush and u they
pulled back under extremely heavy
Com.mun1st sniper fire.
The first use of tanks in South
Vietnam was on Feb. 7 when a column
of 10 tanks overran the U. S. Special
Forces camp at Lang Vei guarding
(See VIETNAM, Page %)
Johnson Raps Cable TV Owner
Criticism in
_Labor Speech
. /tJ., tt .. Pna latenaUoaa.
President Johnloo llred back at hi1
crltks today Jn a speech that drew
whoopt of favor from an audience
of labor supporters
"I sometimes wonder why we
Americans enjOJ punishing oursevles
with 11el!-crltJcijp\s." Johnson told the
13th lepalatJve Conference of the AFL·
CJO Buildin& and Construction Trades
department in Washington.
"I am not saying we've never had
it so good -but that's the truth,
lsn 't It?"
The President's appearance touched
off a demonstration in which about
a dozen delegates paraded in front
of the rostrum carrying signs which
read: "Back our boys in Vietnam"
and "w1nted, a place to hide ror
the chicken senator."
The latter sign apparently referred
to Sen. Robert F. Kennedy <D·N Y I.
who entered the race for the
Democratic pres1denbal nomination
against Johnson after a surprisingly
strong showing by Sen. Eugene J.
McCarthy, (0-Minn.), on a peace plat-
form in the New Hampshire primary.
Kennedy, campaigning in California
today, stepped up h1i; attack on
Johnson's Vietnam policy.
In a prepared speech to students
at San Fernando Valley Slate C-Ollege,
Kennedy said Americans must "refuse
to blindly pursue bankrupt policies
which rend us from our friends and
drain us or our treasure. in the
fruHless pursuit of illusions long since
shattered."
McCarthy. meanwhile. was in
Milwaukee campaigning ror the April
2 Wlscoos1n primary.
On the Republican side. the brrach
between moderates and conservatives
widened with lhe emergence of a new stop-Nixon drive a n d an-
nouncement by a leading GOP dove
that he would vote for a Democrat
rather than support Nucon
'Mie new GOP group, already claim·
Ing political and £lnancial support
from 21 stales. plans w organize na·
UooaJly within 10 days to boost thr
presidentJal candidacl~ of Repuhbcan
moderates like Sen. Charles H Percy.
DI., Sen. Mark 0. H1Uield, Ore . New
York City Mayor John V Lindsay
(Set POLmCS, Pitt !)
To Sell Rights
Aftu struallng for more th111 1~
months to get the project off lhe
ground. Ne~rt Beach c a b I e
television <CA TV) franchJae-holder
John R. Frost has agreed to sell
out to a newly establlahed company.
it was disclosed today.
The new firm . Newport Beach
Cablevision, Inc .. is a wholly owned
subsidiary of Foote, Cone & Belding.
lhe sixth largest advertising firm in
the country.
Newport Cablevision's board of
directors includes several Newport
residents. all executives in various
fields.
Also on the board is former Federal
Co mmun ications Commission
chairman Newton Minow. who earned
his niche in communications history
by referring to television as a "vast
wasteland "
Louis E. Scott. a Foote. Cone &
Belding vice president, is president
of the new CATV firm. Scott. who
lives in Bayshores, said today the
Huntington Man
Sprays Chemical
In Officer's Eyes
Buena Park police today are
searching for a Huntington Beach man
who sprayed an unknown chemical
into an officer's eyes Sunday.
Police said officer Richard Swift
was questionln1 Raymond J. Chappel,
Tl. of 2623 England SI • when h,.
was temporarily blinded by 1
' homemade" chemical spray device.
Police were interrogaUng Chapptl
and Mcrty M. Mosely, ~. of San
Francisco, cm 1u1plclon of using a
stolen credit card when the fugitive
pulled a 1pr1y can from b.11 car and
shot it lnto Swift'• eyes.
company has agreed to purcb1se an
of the stock of Pacific Cable Services,
Inc .. Frost's CATV firm.
Frost. who says he has spent mOT1!
than $50,000 on studies related to
estabhstung a CA TV system here. is
scheduled to appear at a public hear·
Ing before the city council too~t.
The hearing was set three montM
ago to determine whether his company
is qualified ro carry out the terms
of the CATV franchise.
The original franc'hise was awarded
to Warner Bros. TV Services In
December, 1966. A few m<>nths later.
Warner Bros. quit the CATV field
and sold its CA TV interests to Pacific
Cable Services. Frost, who bad ob-
tained the Newport francMse for
Warner Bro5., Is president of Pacific
Cable Services.
Since then, Frost bas had little luck
either 10 getting the cable television
system in operation in Newport or
m getting city council approval oC
the franchise transfer. Several times
lhe council has delayed action pending
receipt of information on the financial
status of Pacific Cable Services.
Councilmen tonight probably will
continue the public hearing fur severel
weeks to allow time f'1r' .a staff review
of Newport Cablevision's plan to take
over Frost's CATV assets, including
the disputed franchise.
Newport Cablevision. it ha& been
reported, expects to spend more than
11 million developing and inataillng
a CATV system here.
Frost had intended to use Pacific
Telephone Co. lines to pipe clear TV
signals into Newport homes. It Is
not yet known whether Newport
Cablevision would use telephone com-
pany facilities or go underground with
ifs own Imes . sources aald.
or .. ~
Weatlle~
Hippies 'Invade' Venice
While Swill WU temporarily blind·
ed. Chappel escaped on fool. Mosley
was jailed on suspicion of robbery.
burglary and 111tnll with 1 caustic
chemkal.
Police had stopped the pair because
they allegedly UMd 1 stolen credit
card at the Crescent Motel on Be1ch
Rnulevard
Sunny ind seventyl1h-th1t'1
the word from forecaster !:mll
Kurtz, who SIYI the warm spell
wUI hang around at le11l
through midweek along the Or-
anae Coast.
INSIDE TODAY
AppropriGt.tlu ~ftOVOh, t4R
hooil w~e enterr.d m .8olborl
Yacht Clvb'1 opening raos of tu
nnnual "66 Semi." "'°" S111'Ct.11
hJI Jock Baillif'1 U-mttff tloOp
Nftoa/>ov, Pogt J2.
Property Owners Demand More Police Protection
"One widespre8d rumor 11 that
W't'U be back Jt tbt problem recurs.
1beJ can count on It," be said Sonday.
Mott ot the eompWntl are a1alnst
"tb• burda. Jont baJr, dirty legs.
hippie unltonn1 and unCOIJ9erltlooaJ
.a babtta," 1&11 Simon. All llUJnated ... llOO bippi• llV'f'
wttbtn a ffW blocb CJi tbl tie.ell and
.... ........ to be •pnish21.
~
Officer Swift wa~ "1ven tm<'rRency
trratment ind 111 In iroro t'ondltlon
1oday. poli~ said.
9 Prisoners Escape
RENO. Nev. (AP) -NI n e
priionen. lncludin1 one awaltlng trlal
on a murder charee, bfob oct o(
the Washoe County Jail eaTly today
.11fter beating a jallv and t&ktnR hh
pt~tol Five ftl'e recaptuTl"d before
daybr~k .
'
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Looking tor ROfld Islam!?
You have lo admit it made a weird looking sight
when Joe RiC'htet of Salinas trucked his 47·foot
trawler Meridian 15 miles to the ocean over the
Sult Seeks Change
llf'I T ....
weekend. Boat her' 1s seen on bridp Off? Higtiway
101 where 1t appears to be "sailing ' aJon1 hiaJJwa.y
on its own.
Rites Slated
I •
J"r IC t•:• l. • 'Rk~ .,F•J..iigm•
Beaetl lw woe bia INlld w.lta the
city over ~ of Die~ C'Olol1'ul
Barefoot Bar.
Tbe AtcoMlic Be+aqe Contnl
BoaN.I has overruled the city'• protat
o( tra.oafer of the farmttr bar'• liquor
license to Boardwllk Eattrpr»ea.
The ccwparatioe ii a alWdl., Jtl
CoosGllclated lllortl•I• C.., · fl wlll9
R ichman is president.
Under tbe ruling, RJctunan may
bfog1n operation of a bar at 111 Ocean
Ave. May ,, City Maupr Jamu
o. Wheaton said the city pl.Ha •
further appeal la ta. m•k.
Tustin Residents Proiest
The dty aatnt.alied lD a four-41-r
hearini lD JlltUVJ' tblt operabon fl tht.~ ~.c~ .. •~lice bltrn. . Potlee tJlkt flarry La
tmifi~ tbat * bea:tt
proWem lmproved ereatlY after :
bar dosed. . •
n.e city .backd up ~ c ... wtlt
color ftlrD f~ *>&. Miiii tbe betq~
and &ettlmoll7 about nal 1eo
t1vlty a.nd .ne9U 1'tiJlie "die bar WU
in operation.
Ricbman testified be w o u I 4
absolQlleb'" • cater t• « employ
homOHXUlila if hit c:uporation 11
ass•ined the ~.
Festival in Court Over For Huntington Irvine Motorcycle Course
Artist Selection Policy
The Fetlival of Arts waa up lo bat
ln Superior Cotat today defending ita
policy on aeled:ini who shall exhibit
their works in the summer art 1how
Stuart Durkee, Festival treasurer
and board member. detailed tbe melh·
od that wu used in the 1987 show to
select nhibiton. Durkee was to re-
sume the stand in the afternoon ses·
sion.
The 1u.it against the Festival was
brought by sculptor Edmund Van Deu·
3e1l to force a change in the method
of telectlni Festival exhibitors. Van
Oeu8eft has userted that Festival
procedures in the past were unfair.
Durkee pointed out In test.Jroony
Ulla morning that 1967 exhibitors were
judged by a panel of t~ juror11
during the show. New applicants WtT'f'
juried later for the avallable booths
Stuart Roussel
Rites Pending
Services were pendinit to<lay for
F' Stuart ROUJsel, a Newport Beach
resident for 25 year5. al Baltz
Mortuary. Corona de.I Mar.
Mr. Roussel 64. died 6t South Coast
Community H~ on Sunday.
Born in Wimbledon. England. he
came to America 40 years ago. He
w1s 1 member ol the Stock Exchange
Club of Loi Angeles and president
of the Bond Olub. He was vice presi·
dent of First California Co , Laguna
Niguel.
He .. tUTVived by his wife. Helena
of the homt. 624 Ramona Terrace.
Irvine Terrace: two d a u (Z h I er i; •
Pabieta Kuykendall of Utah and
Diane Reynolds of Oregon: two ~tep
rhildren, Gretchen Euner or l..a
Can.cia and Gary Gentner o C
Honolulu : and eight grandchildren.
The famliy auggestl that tt10M who
wish may make a memo.rial con-
tribution to the He.art Reeearch of
Orange County.
Ex-OCC Student
Killed in War
A former Oran~ Coast Collttt atu·
dent, Jer'e t>ouilu Famow, 21, hu
betll killed m aotioll in V\etnm\, ac·
cordini to word received by his
parerb In Lai Veg• Wt week.
Farnow was bom ill Oaklaod, CIUf .
but was educated m Lu Vegas
achoou He had been Vi tile Army
18 monttis and 1n Vietnam tor die
past all monttu servmg in a tank
~ wtth 'the lst Cavalry Divi11lon
He wu the son of Mr aod Mr11
Dou11~ farnow of Lu Vep1. and
the irandaon of the late HarTy
P'aroow, Troptcana Hotel exte'IJtiw.
DAILY PILOT
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T\e111u A. M1,,t.'9e
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Jeck •· C.,t.y P•11I HlfMll ...._.,.... Af ... IMO.,.... ...............
lllr Wwl ..,_ IW.
W.-., JtM,.. P.O. a. 1811 tlUJ
OkC-...
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ot1 the basil of three art works sub-
mitted.
Durkee test.ailed that theN' aN'
more applkanta for the 170 or 1JO
boths than there is room and that Uus
has been the situalJon for seven years.
He said that Ulett hat to be 90me
method o{ keeping up the quality of
the show and also admitting some new
artists each year.
Bird Sanctuary
Plan Pushed
For Lake Park
"The Huntintgoo Lake •ea ls uni·
que because il is really the only fresh·
water marsh left undeveloped along
the Orange C-Oasl plus it has il! own
water supply o( natural apnngs ."
The warning was made by William
T Watson. preiudent of the Los
~n~eles Audubon Society. who met
Saturdav with 11 o t h e r con·
servationilll and c1v1c leaden at
the home of HuntinKton Beach mayor.
Donald D. Shipley.
Also involved 1n the meeting were
conservationists who have recently
shown an interest In preservins the
natural mantlla.nd of ttle Upper &y
area in Newport &ach. 'Ibe indication
was that the ialt nau in Newport
and the fresh wal~ area in Hun-
tington Beach represent similar pro·
blems in ~nseTvat1on
ThP l2 del ved into t~ po11sibilltv
of creatmg a 200-acre game and bird
preserve with fi.thmg facilities for
children, hlk.ins trails. a Library
overlooking Huntington Lake, an
obs~atory. motmcycle TUM and
campsites in the $1lll undeveloped
area north of Talbert Ave., on both
sides or Golden Wot Street.
Donkey Ball
Game Planned
The jumor clas5 of Corona del Mar
High School will sponeor a do!'lkey
butetb&ll 1ame 'I'uelday. A-pril 2,
at a p.m. tn the ldlool'a boy's gym.
On Donke,1 1upp1Md by Reyookis
Company. tile faculty will p 1 t
themselves against members of the
JUNOr Class.
Tkbt. may be purd\8Md from aK'f'i
J unior Class officer or al the door.
Sl.Z for adull4. and 50 cents for
cltlldren. AU proceeds wtll fO toward
the Prom.
J.
Pool Victims
Rosary will be r~ted toniibt 1t
7·45 o'clock a t Smith's Mortulry
~I 'In HISltinrton Beach for the
young moliler and her l'W<>-year-old
IOft who drowned Friday m the family
sw unnung pool.
Mrs. Raymond Kokowicz. 21, and
Eric, 2 were viot.un.1 al the double
tragedy.
V1s1tation wtU be held from 7 to
9 o'clock tonight at Smith's wltll re·
qwem mass to be celebrated Tueaday
at 9 a m. at Sta. Simon and Jude
Catholic Church in Huntington Beach.
Interment will follow at Holy Croes
Cemete'T')' tn Los Angeles.
Only survivors in the immedlate
family are Raymond K~owiC%, 32,
and th~·Week-Old KM'N ol the home
at 8T11 Albatron Drive.
The father returned home from
work Friday to find the amall infant
crying In ~ house.
He spotted young Eric floating fully
clothed in tbe swimmiJ\i pool, and
while b'ylnf to revive him wttb mouth·
to·mouth resuscitation, he saw hl11
wife lymg on the bottom of the pool.
Young Eric had been IWlmmlni
~rnce ht was five moot.bl ok1. He
apparently had Jumped into the pool
when his football (ell in and his mottler
died tryins '° save him.
Mn. K.oltow\cs is surviftd by two
brothers. Thomas EllloU of Temo~
City and Car 1 EllioU of netr.it: aii'd
a si1ter, Nat>ey Miller of Germany,
In addiUon to her husband, Raymond,
and lnlant dauibter, Kann.
Fr .. P .. e l
VIETNAM ...
the wtstern appro1che11 !('I Kht Sanh
Theae bad come lD lr<>m Laos alon~
east·west Hlatiway t .
The tanks In the Hue region ap-
parenUy came across a new high
speed bipway tbe North Vietnamese
have been able to build across the
A Shau valley from Laos JO miles
below the Khe Sanh fortress. Tht
CommunJsts drove a Green Beret Unit
out of lht A Shau vajley a }tar
ago in heavy fightinjt.
The Americ&M were mort sue"
cu!lful in the Saigon area today A
spokesman said U. S. troop11 kil1ed
114 guerrlllu in the very outskirt11
of the capital while U. S. helicoptf'r
gunships destroyed • Viet Cong nett
of 11$ 1unpan1 trytni to run arms
to the CommunlJts baranJni Saigon.
The U. S. troops killed the guerrillas
in four battles, one only five milf's
from American military beadquart .. n
in Tan Son Nhut airbase. It ra1s"<I
lo 1.288 the Viet Cong killed in two
weeb by tht allies' operation re~otvl'd
lo win antl·guerrill• drive in lht
SaiJon art a.
The Pet.en Canyon Homeowners
Association in Tustin will appeal a
county use variance whic+t allowed
the l.ntne CG. to build a motorcycle
course in the mowtaiN eut of lta
memben' bclnHle, ICCGl"dtnc '° Dr.
Trial Dat,e Set
For Auto Theh
A San Ju1n C.piatrano youth who
waa ruled to be ln1ane when be 1toie
a Laguna BeKh man's sportt car
1s now sane and c.i face trial,
Superior Judie WiWam SpeJn bu
ruled.
Daniel Dismang, 11, o( 3%295 Del
Obiapo Road. bu been ordered to
return to court on May JJ. Ht ba1
been returned from Awcadero St.ate
Hospital to which be wu committed
last Jan. 1.
Dl1mang and Michael D. Park. ta,
Of 111 Emerald Ave .. Balboa 111.a.nd.
were arrested by Ve:nce poUce last
Oct. 17 after a wild oceanfront cbue
in that beach city. Both youtba we.re
wounded by police bullet. and were
rharged with grand theft auto when
their ear wa1 identified •• belonlinl
to Leo F. Walt.era, 7 Rockledre Road, t.arun-Beach.
Fr._ P•e J
POLITICS ...
and "very definUely" Gov. Ne!Joe
A. Rockefeller ol New York.
Duff Reed, a tpeciaJ uai.ltant to
GOP moderate Sen. ~ 8 .
Morton. Ky., and a 11poke1m11n for
the new group. denied that it was
"a stop·anye>ne mowmeot." but the
coalition's Iirst public pronouncement
roundly mticiud Nlxoo'a stand ow
the Vietnam war and the urban crlaia,
the two dominating inues of tbe cam-palp.
Reed and New York milliooalr•
Stewart Motl organized the coalition
and Rffd said Morton. a former na·
honal Republican chairman, "will play
a leading role" in 1t
Hatfield. meanwblle. aa1d in a
television interview he would vote
aJ.(ainst Nixon 1f ht won the Gor
nomination if the former v1cr prrr;1-
dent continues as a V i e t n a m
"l\llrdtmer" .and If tbt Democnta drop
President J<lhnloft fOr • I t b e r
McCarthy or Ke~y.
Pushing Lindsay and P~y as
alternMive1 to Nixon, Hatfield said.
"my coootry ii i.n 1ocb a periloull
position today. , .that I mu.at support
what I think is best foe my country
OT humanity ratt.er than just putting
my party Oral"
Jack L. Andrew•. leader ot the pro-
perty OW'l'lef'I pr«eet.
The homeowners are arguing that
the mo&orcydet ~ bDCh • notse
and • uf.ty pt'Oblem tor nearby
resklenta. Andrews uid that heme
ownen in C.OWU Rel-ta and PetBI
CUyoa art unoyed bJ tbe DOiM ol
500 motorqclea wtiidl trawril tbe ~
acre coune each weekend.
He added that tbe cyda ma.at 10
t!lrOQJb Lemon Relghta residential
area to pt to the comw tbeNl>y
creatini a aatety buard for local
cbiktren.
The uae variance wa1 11anted by
the plannjq comm.laioD Feb. 7 and
appHh mlllt be filed wttlm 14 day•
cl the ta.uance. But Andrew• argues
tbal be ud Che oa.-homeownerl
didn't know ol tbe propoeed tr.ct
until March 10 when they tint beard
the roar of the motiorcyclea.
He •aid tbe pluatnc comm.iMion
failed "to confcrm to the requirements
ol tbe cowity .uni ordinance'' in
that notice.I abould have been po8ted
to inform the homeownen of the
variance.
A •pok•mu for the pl••ini com-
misllOll u)d the conunt..loa ii re-
quired to notify all jiiOpeftJ cnmert
within a 300-foot radim ol tt.e pro-
poeed oae variance and that tbb was
done. He Wd also tt\ait the fact that
the lTYine Co. bad applied for the
variance wu publi.lbed 1everal time•
in the newspapert.
SbekSon Sma:rt, spokesman for Ule 1nblie CO., uld Gae ~ II ....,.
a mllt from tbe neareat bome aod
that very fnt JD«crcycles travel
throqtl resideatiaJ ~u oa their way
to the track.
Smart Wei that tbe county had bad
a aalety problem wttb respect to
motorcyctu and that now the track
provides a place for cydistl to ettjoy
the sport,, without causing danger to
members o( the community.
2nd Kite Flying
Contest Saturday
The second annual kite Oying cham·
pionships will be held on the mall
ol Irvine Town Center across from
tM UCI umpua at l p.m .• Saturday.
First. second and third·place pla·
que11 w1H be awarded for the most
original kite. the biegest and the
tligbe&t ftyiftc In children and adult
di viaio 1\1.
The event. aponsored by the Irvine
Town Center Merchants' Association.
will be Jadted by WUliam R. Maaon,
praident al the Irvine Co. and Daniel
Aldricb. chanceHor ot UCI.
Furtber informaU. can be obtained
by aalliDt BW Beet. P"Jlldent of the
uaocaUoo. at LU-0880.
UPI T.._.....
M•-M• Vp
As part of aeries of high level
government changes IDDOUDC•
ed Friday, Wilbur Cohen
(shown here in 1967 me photo)
moved up from undersecrt·
tary of Health, Education and
Welfare Department to become
HEW secretary. He succeedJ
John Gardner, who resigned
to direct Urban Coalition, a
private arrti·poverty organw·
lion.
Pair Sentenced
In Bookmaking
Two Newport Beach men accused
of operating a. bqokJlialdng ,Puli.oeu
switched their pleas to ' iullty today
and were sentenced to suspended jail
tenns and three years' orobetlon.
Requesting immediate sentencing
before ~n apparently surprbed Judite
William Speirs were William Lee
Demer. 28. and Ned Eckert, 30. Both
men lived at 3715 Seashore Drive..
Newport, at the time of their arrest
last August.
Noting that the diltrict attorney had
recommended probation, Judge Speirs
asked the two men: "Wbat'1 tht
re-ason for this?"
Prosecutor Michael Cappnzi In·
terjected: "Botti men have no prior
recorda and we feel that they have
been very cooperative in this matter."
'That's a humane and just recom·
menctat1on," J udge Speirs remark~.
He added that both men. after ~1x
monthi; of satisfactory probation,
could return to ~rt and bave the
charge reduced to a m isdemeanor.
Two other men involved in tht
bookmakini cb.arge al.lo plieaded
guilty and sought immedfate sen·
tencrng
Jack N. Leum. '8. of Monrovia.
was tent~ to 75 days 1n Orange
County Jail and three years probetion.
Henry T. Smith. 11. o< Pall9dert.a,
got a 30 day jail c.enn and thr~
years probation.
0
OMEGA
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'IEACHID' HELICOPTIR SHOWS UNDERSIDE LIES ON SAND AFTER CRASH
Outltoerd Motor Co.er, Other G..r from Dlatreue4 loet Plied on a.~ (f0f'9ground)
Antonia 'Unconcered'
After Poisoning of Baby
By THOM BARLEY
Of ... Dllty , ... SWf
Antonia Tbomtd showed an ap-
parent la<:k of coocern about her
baby's condition in the houn im-
mediately following his fatal poison-
ing, motel owner Mary Madden's
sister testified today in Superior
Court.
"She never asked any of U! in
the motel bow her baby wu and
she never asked if she could bold
him," Mu. Chari.ea Richardson ol Sen
Clemente aaid. "And he was the same
at the boepit.al -she never inquired
of the doctors and nurses just bow
the baby waa getting on."
Mrs. RJchardaon, the tenth pro-
secution witness in the second trial
of the accused murderess, told the
court that when she and her husband
arrived at the Beach Motel in the
Police Disrupt
Fight at Park
A possible riot Sunday at IrviM
Parle wu quickly quelled by sheriff's
deputies and California Highway
Patrol olficen.
Deputies reported that the perk was
filled to capacity when a brge crowd
gathered to watcll an impromptu fJg'bl
An unknown person threw a rock
at a deputy and he called for' rein-
fOJ"cements.
Ten sheriff's wlHs and aix CRP
p'°"ol cars responded and decided
to clear the park.
While they were earryini out the
project, someone started a sherlff's
patrol car and watched it smash into
another sheriffs unit. Neither car was
occupied and the damage was small,
deputies said.
No arrests were made and after ttl9 park was cleared of the milling
throng, famlliu were permitted to
r~
Mental Tests Set
For Lay Preacher
BUENA PARK - P 1ychi1tric
dbservation has been order'*S for 1
layman preacher ~ r.s llCCUJed of
sexually molesting an Mabelm OJ'I
ovtr a nine-year period.
Superior Court Judge WUllam Speirs
ordered the m-.i examination for
Job Valdez, 43, of Buena Part. Velde1
must rebrn to ~i<>r Court April
lS for possible classlficatioo aa a D1en-
tany d.lsordered sex offeoder.
V.aldc. a 11.T miDlJt« and IOllg
leader at the Pruar of Fite dlllrcll
in H1Chll0d Part. is c:barged ri.h
statutory rape. He 11 alleCed eo bllft
bad sex relation• with a ,Ul DO\\
17 over the tut nine ,ean.
Police uJd tbe pl'• mother t o 1 d
tbem that Valda eomUntlr auured
his rict1m that dletr illldt relatt<e"'(p
WU .... wfJ1 of God.•
early boun of July 14, 19116, 7-day
old James ~thmy Thomas, wu "in
very poor shape."
"His mouth was all black," 1he
said. "All be could do wu mile
a little gurgling 10\md and be seemed
to be having difficulty breathing."
Mrs. Thom.u, 25, la accused of the
murder of her infant, the issue d.
a clandestine relatiomhlp with a
Marine Corps buddy of her husband,
by adding a caustic solution -
poNibly lye -to his feeding bottle
on July 13, 1966.
The proeecutioo alleges that the FlD-
pino woman, desperate with the 1Duni-
neot return of ber Marine .ergeant
husband from ~erteaa, poisoned h
child. The def9'le bu not denied tMt
Marine Pvt. Rubeo "Dave" Davila,
part time belp at the Beach Motel at
that a.me, wu the father of the mW'·
dered baby.
It wu stated by tile prosecution
at tti. outset d. the second trial,
however, that the death 1entence
'fVOul' not be SOUghl
''Mr 1 . Richarcuon,,. commented
defenae attal'Dey Dudley Gray today,
"you 111 tMt Mrs. 'niomas did not
inquire alter ber aict baby? But isn't
U a fact tbat she waa very upset
at the time?''
"Yes," Mrs. Richardaon replied. "I
guess you could say she was."
''How would 10Q de9crtbe her emo-
tional state?" Gray atked.
"Well," aald the witness, "I'd aay
she was incoherent. Sb• dJdn 't say
anythin& altbotlCh •be kept mumbling
tn a foreign language. It was bard
to make out just bow she felt and
ttbat abe thought Ud happened.. She
WU real quiet."
Mn. RichanltoD WU the first
winiest to take the ltand lr the 11Ith
day of the mW'der trial. It la expec~
that the defeme pbue of the trial
will be laanebed wttbiD the next two
days.
MOTHER CIWlGED
Mn. Thomas' baby died in the
bolpt&al on July 13, 1988, and the
mOCber ,,.. cbqed with his murder
tbret moothl later.
I.n a tensatJonal.. ending to tbe first
trial in May, 1987, Judge Bruce
SWnDer ruled a mlltrlal when a be1l-
taot juror commented. during a J)M·
verdict polling, that be "had juat gooe
along with the majority" in votJ.nc
for a guilty verdict.
Judge Sumner's decision w a a
·hallenged by District Attorney Cecil
i-lickl but was upheld by tbe califoroia
Supreme Court.
Gny CGDtncb there is o. subltan·
tlal evidence t.o 1iDt the b1117'1 pot.oe-int wilb Mn. Thomu. Ht Intends
to leek court pennissk>ll for ICJ'eening
ot • ftlDl wllich deptct, Mrt. 'nlmq,as
under bypooal &Dd whJch ~ch
ruponaea which pron. he clafml.
t.Ut h1a cli«lt i• llmocent.
Gray ii opected t.o make h.11 tt-·
quat witll the opmlof Of ttae defeose
pbM °' Ult trial
I Blossom~s Oui
Pe~ Piq~ at PoodlUh Pup;
Copter Falls
Onto Beach
Aiding Boat
A small helicopter crashed late Sun·
day afternoon on Bolsa Chica St.ate
Beach. south of the blUfls in Hun·
tington Buch. while attempting to
rescue an 18-foot outboard which was
floundering in the breakers.
Pilot Ray Poss, 25, 2288 Euclid Ave .•
Long Beach, received a cut on his
right band which required eight
1tltches at Hoag Memorial Hospital
before being released.
Police said Poss first landed on
the beach and attached a cable to
the water-swamped boat belonging to
Jessy J. Brown, 14043 Behrens s• ...
Norwalk, In ao. attempt to pull the
craft out to .-.
The pllot told police that the weight
of the boat and the occupants was
too much. When be took Off, the
helicopter was pulled down and crash-
ed into the sand, be said.
Neither skipper Brown nor his
pusengera, Clarence Allen of Norwalk
and Billy and Wilbert Doyle of
Downey, were injW'ed.
He aa.ld the boat had engine !allure
and drifted into shore.
Olympic Group
Says $72,000
Funds Missing
NEW YORK (AP) -The U.S.
Olympic Committee today asked the
district att-0rney in Dalla& to look
into the disappearance of some rn.ooo
collected In the Southwest for the
Olympk fund.
In Dall1ts. it was reported that the
Dallas Grand Jury had received five
embez:zlement counts growing out of
locai handling of the funds.
Arthur Lentz, executive direct.or of
the U.S. Olympic Committee, said his
f)(fice had uked District Attorney
Hell1)' Wade of Dallas to make an
lnvettlgatlon several weeks ago after
1m4mymous telephone t i p s of
ml.amanagement of the funds.
Lentz said this was the first instance
ol any 1ort of a scandal in the col·
lectlon of Olympic funds. The U.S.
Olympic Committee depends on dona-
tions and subtcriptlons for the support
ol ltt teams. ··we have a record of m.ooo ha·
veln1 been collected, but the money
hat not been received by this office.·•
Ledl Nid.
_..,. ---
OAJLV PILUT ~
Taken While Shopping
Coast Woman Loses Ring W orth$400
Buretan lifted '925 In clllb ud
loot from four loc•tJons in Co.t. Mesa
over the weekend, police reported to-
day.
The heaviest loss wa.s reported by
P~cla Lou Lindquist. 30, ol 11181
Garfield Ave., Huntington Beach. who
said someone took her sapphire and
rub1 ring from the front eeat of ber
car while 1he wu 1hopplng lD South
Coast Plua. The rtni was valued
at MOO. she saJd.
Jewelry also was the target of a
burglar who walked Into tbe home
of ..;eorge A. Vesper, 57, 1821 Mlnorca
Drive. The thief removed two wat·
THE BODY-BRAS SHAPED
WITH ENKA CREPESET *
What's going on under the new shape
of fashion? The natural bras ••• subtle.
spare ••• beautifully pared-down to
pretty-girl proportions! Smoothing the
silhouette into younger, more gentler lines
with the cloud-spun softness of
Enka Crepe set I\) nylon and nylon/ spandex
powernet. By Hollywood-Vassarette, 5.00
fut11red· leu-04'9e<I ltr• with
f•.,.i11•f•d pofytslor fillorfill cup•
11ylo11 1p•11dn pow•r"•' 1id•1 •"d bee~ lomo" white •• 9olde11 h1tt.
11-16 A-l·C.
NEWPORT
47 Fashion lslaftd • lftwl>O'\ Suell
Tt~pflonf ... 4·1212
Sftoc> Monda1 lllnl Frtday 10 00 I 111. to
q )0 p m.-Sallrdly 10 1.m. to •·o p "'·
•hou ri9ht: Urtderwlr• J • .,.j.\re
with f•m•1t•t..f pofyHl•r fiborfilf
cups, 11yfo11/1p•"<lu ,ower1tet b•ck
•"" 1ide1, dutch l•c• •cce11h
Whit• or 9old•1t h•n. H ·l6 A.l .C
HUNTINGTON BEACH
7 777 Ed1119tr A¥t. • HUl'ltlnqt.on IMch
Tt-ptlone 8'2·3)31
Shocl M°'*J t11n1 ~
10:00 &.Ill. to'·'° p.m.
ches, some cuff lin1cs and ring, valued
collectavety at $258, police "~
Burglars broke Into a rear door
of Dean Lewis Imports, 1968 Harbor
Blvd , aad took $150 from the casb
box aft.er breaking into HVU&l ~
cabinets, according to police .
COME MEET LINDA HUT.CH, -
HOLL YWOOD-VASSARElTE
STYLIST, IN OUR
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNDATIONS DEPARTMENt
ON MARCH 27-21
ANAHEIM
... ~. Euclld • Anaheim
ANNfm Shoppln9 Otnttf'-~ 53S-81
St.op M~ thru Saturdfy
10 o 1.m. to ''lO p.m.
....
Cc..llM W .. Deir ... ...,
Hippies and beaob buma are
wearing out t h e i r welcome on
Kauai [!laud. R•lph Hnta, county
supervisor, Llhue, Kauai, Hawaii,
says they should be lbown "tber,
are not welcome and not wanted.'
He told fellow npenilon tba& the
"aloha spirit'' must, ot neceaity,
be curbed. •
•Queen of dw Cenumdcil HI Db:olt, 2S
. mUu eon of &Jcromfftto, ii lln. C.·
~ Yc»intam. 104 11ean ~· The ctlcbra~ t0Aich btginl April rool'•
Day, f1at1ir11 "100 Years of Prog-
reu.n Mn. rotnttait&, 10ho uttled m
the DUon arta ita 1885 after a '°"'" month cowrfd 1000on trip 1Dith ht'T
parenu f ,. o m lliuouri, hal Liv~
tht'Tt three vear1 longer than thl'
cit11'1 bun there. • Dall.u Patrolman G. I . Lem·
m0n1 left his squad car to accom·
pany a prlsoner to jail in another
vehicle. Wben he returned, he
found someone had siphoned more
than 10 gallons of gas from bis
\.anJ(. L e m m o n a was left just
endugb gas to mate it to a service
station for a refW. • For the first time in the hlstory
ol. Santa Monica meter collectors.
a patron actually demanded bis
money back. It see1n1 that John
C.yton, 13, took a penny from bis
mother to put in the meter in front
of a coin shop where be was going
to let an expert loot at bis ~pt;ze
1873 Arrows. type clime. f 0 u CUeaed it! City Treasurer Kay
Watanabe returned John's dime.
which the coin expert said could be
woRb $150 or more. •
Da Lal Count11, Tcz., commi.f.
lionn• have taktn •kf>I to keep
the wolf from th• door. Com-
missionen soid that they will
pafl a wolf trappn $250 per
month for nmt month.! to deal
with the pe1kt1 critters.
• Glenn H. Wellt, 75, collapsed
while working in the back yard of
his retirement borne in Largo, Fla.
HU wife, Eleanor, 80, rushed to bis
side to ofler aid and then, she also
collapeed. A medical en.miner said
that both of them died of heart
attacks. • · Independent tele~roducer
Jamet W. e>w.ns rev tbal a
group of promoters hopes to eatab-
1.isb a "Rock 'n Roll Hl.ll of Fame"
Jn Atlanta. The biggest problem, be
.!Wd. wa1 to find Rock 'a Roll en-
·tertainers aid enouati to retire.
Bodies Seen
In Irish Sea
Air Disaster
FISmJARD. Wales (AP) -Bodies
and blta of wrectace were fOWMI today
near where ., Irilh airliner pb.ao1ed
1Pimllnl into the Irish Sea Sunday
with al persam aboard. Hope almost
bas been abandoned for flndfnc any
survtvors.
The British Air-Sea Rescue Cent«.
directing ttle search. said a friga~
bad picbd up h'O bodies and s.ighted
a third.
Wreck.age wu found, too, about
eight miles off Rosslare Point, Wex-
ford, Ireland.
Tbe last cryptic message from the
pilot sU1 " ... at leallt 1,000 feet
• . . spinning rapidly."
Lifeboats from Kilmare and Dun·
more on the h'isb coaat put to sea
and an Irish Army helicopter j-Oined
the search for more bodies arid
wnebee.
On &bore, 1qlWldl ol. police from
Wexford and Riosdlre palrOUed die
beacbet. should anything be washed
up tbet-e.
1be Britisb MN1 fri&~ HMS JUrdy
nported she would put iDtA> R~slare
bart>or tonight with tbree bodies and
tome wrecltaee.
Youths Saved
After Night
On Ice Cliff
PINKHAM NOTCH. N.H. (AP) -
Two youths were rescued today from
an ioe cliff in a ravine on Mt. Wuh·
ingtcn where they bad beell stranded
overnight in zero temperature and
l~mtle-an-hour-winds.
Three snow avalancbet on the &,288-
foot mountain totsed the two youths
and a companion onto the perilous
ledge about noon Sunday, the U.S.
Forest Service said.
The three are Jeff Damp, 3>. of
North Conway, and Don Stahlman,
3>. of Milroy, Pa., both studenta at
the University of New Hampeblre .
and Tom Davil, 17, a North Conway
high school student
The youths were roped together and
when they fell, Stahlman wu the
bottom man on the rope. He worked
his way down to thi! floor of the
ravine and' although suffering a COO·
cussion. trudJed a mile and a half
to a cabin of the Harvard Moun·
taineerillg ci.\b.
Rescue efforts wen beiun hn·
mediately but the extreme weather
slowed the progress ol the rescue
team up tbe ravine wall.
David SJdeman and Edward Neetor
reacbed tile stranded pair and lowered
Damp and Davis to the ravine floor
about 2: 15 a.m. They stayed with
the youths wrtiI daybreak when the
job of gettinJ Davis and Damp to
a aafe apot was begun.
SPRING IN MEMPHIS -The Easter bunny ICU.lptured O'ltr the
weekend by sisters Lind~ and Carol Venable at Mempbia symbolizes
the wedding of Winter and Spring that matched a US-inch anowt8'1
in the heart of Dixie with flowers picked just the day before by the
pretty girls. Linda is a freshman al Memphis SUU Universi~, while
Carol (right) is a junior at Peabody College in Nashville.
Spring Freeze
Of 28 Degrees
Hits Florida
MIAMJ, Fla. CAP -Temperatures
fell to record tows all o.,.r Florida
today on ttie heell o( bhutery north
winds that brought snbw to northwest
Florida and freeziag temperatareg to
most Of the state.
Pensacola had mow e.-)J Saturday.
The mercury sltpped to a decrees
shortly after & a.m. at T•llahHMe,
breatilJg the old record of 32 degrees
let OD tbiJ data in 191!11. It also was
the lo'W"eet temperature ever recorded
so late in the aeuon in the c.aptal.
JacklOllville bad a low Of 38, break·
inl the old recotd ol 38 set in 19G6.
Tampa abo reporUcl 31 degrees soon
after midnllht, a record tow for so
late in the seMOD for the tecood
day iii a row. Tbe previous low for
this date in Tampa MWJ 41 on March
25, 1915.
sterling silver
tM 1i/t thol brin1$
• li/e&i#M o/ jqy
Investigation Continues
In Death of 6,400 Sheep
SKULL VALLEY, Utah (AP) -An
investigation to determine wbat killed
some &.400 sheep iii ttus desolate
semiBrid western Utah valley con·
tinued today as rancbcs moved bito
the pa.1tures to *>e>t otber suftertne
sbeep. •
In the past 10 days sheep began
dying by ftle 11\ou!ands and several
qualified vetermarilllS have linked
their deaths to nerve gas testing d
the Anny's Dupay Proving Gf'ound
adJacent to the rangeland.
Dr. Mar Fawcett. one of two
veterinarians called to the Hatch
Ranch -which ha.s sustained more
than 90 per ceJJt ol the Josa -said,
"I have no doubts at all ht or1111ic
phosphate poisoning from nerve gu
testin& killed the sheep."
He aaid be baaed this on lab tests
at Utah State University and on
private study.
Storm Buffets Northeast
Heavy Rains and Hefty Winfh Chill the South
CaHferala
NmtW W DSA wtlnD~•NlllWT 1't f:M A• IST ......
IJ'!~--··-~::::::::::._/ ., '"°' ..
'l'ntpendllreS ..... """'~ .. .
M ti
M JI
SI SI • • M • • • d •
25 17 .... . ,,
S7 • • , -· .. . .. . • • " 11 • JI .. .
" S1 • • .. . "' . • • .. . • • 0 • . ,. . ~
.. ct " . • • .. -.. " . . .. • • I •• . .,,
n • • • ., . • • ,. . . .. '. " • • . . .. . " • • •
\ .•.
4 BOdl.y Injured
In C01Ut GUOTd
Ship Explo1ion
.(UNEAU, AJmka (AP) -An ex-
pk8oa and fin Mrioa.19' inJllnd at least four crewmen Sunday abowd
the Coast Guard cutter Baraiaria,
based at Aiuneda, Calif., Coalt Guard
beadquarte1 bere reported.
The crewmen, 4eacr1bed u Utter
cases, were flown to Kodiak from
the scene our the AJeutiaJI Wand
of Unimlt 1n a Cout GUiid rescua
plane earlJ tocSly.
A spokeanan Mid the aploak>n oc-
curred in the Barataria'a No. 2 engine
room wb.Ue tbe SU.foot ftlMl was
on a routine filblry patrol in Ullimak
Pau, between Unimak ud Akutan
Isl.and SWlday afternoon.
1be fire thrlt followed the aploejon
was quietly contl'Giled. the apokamaa
said.
Tbe CoMt Guard aakl tile namee
of the iDjured would not be released
until next of tin are DDtifled.
Sears
SALE
PRICED
FOR
LIMITED
TIME
ONLY!
. .
..
DAILY '1LOT /J
S~l••lnent
Adam Powell 'Urges Panama's National Guard
•
Sriminer 'Civil War' Rallies Behind Robles
NEW YORK (UPI) -
Adam Q)11tGD Powell atood
in tbe wblte tDUf* pa1pt
of b1J Harlem dJurcb Sun-
day and tokl 3,000 ~
chan1in& 1fOl'lb!pen that the
day had CGlne f<r tbe black
man to le8d and the white
man to follow.
Powell Mid it was time
for "a new dvt war al
young people ttUa IU!D.Dler''
with the blact youth leedi.ol
young wbltes.
He tdd bis audience
"lb ink bi.ck," adding:
• • Je.sua Aid when they h ft
you, turn the other cheek
-but after that. I aay kick the bell om of 'em."
He stopped hie sermon to
order a painting of a white
C'hrill rlptWld from the altar.
crying: i&Get K out of
here I" He ordered ll replac-
ed with a black Christ.
He attacked moderate
civil rights leadtt Martin
Luther King, calling him an
"Uncle Tom."
CALLS FOR CIVIL WAR
Adam Clayton Powell
"Ybll tell 'em, brother!.. h Is homecoming sermon at
members ol the ~nee t h e Abyssinian B a p t la t ~· "Yes, Lord!u the audience said repeated· Church, then led hundred!
Jy, "Hallelajaftl'' . from .his. audience on a 22·
Powell, dressed In a now· block march t h r o u g h
in& bm::t and red robe for Harlem. Penon1 joined the
line ot IDlrCb at every PANAMA (AP) -Na-nJon from the Supreme tion of a candidate for ttie heard but guard sources
block. tional Guard troopa flJlUh· Court. due to reconvene May presidential election, said later a wupon bad "There be eoes ! There be pa!" bystanden sbooted. ed the headquarters of op-next Monday. allowed the use of govern-been fired accldemally,
"Bl& dllddy'a t.ck ln wwn. ponents o( President Marco Witnesses s a 1 d the ment facilities for political Throughout Suoday, the
Aia't he aomething! 1 TORN A.DOS A. Robles today .cl ar-flW'dsmen smashed win-propaganda and hired and opposition appeared unable
wonder what he's eolnc to rested an oppositioii leader dowa and doors and moved fired ,overnment employes to marshal a demooatration
do next!" RIP LA OS aft.er the Natiooal Assembly In behind a baITage of tear for political reasons. to equal a proaovernment ~ell ..,otesmen said swore in a new president au bombs shorUy after 2 It swore In the first vice rally held Friday.
liater he wu going to -an action Robles igno~. a.m. at the two-story head-president, Max Delvalle, as Robles contends t h e
Wublngton t-Oday to talk ,VIENTIANE, Lao. (UPI) The troops moved in two quarters of the National president and Delvalle nam· assembly has no leaal right
wtth atirorneys about legal -A powerful torudo rip-hours alter twice-deposed Union, a fivei>'U'ty coalition ed a new cabinet and called to impeach him. Hia sup-
action to win back the COD· ped through Vientiane Sun· ex-President Arnu!fo Arias opposition o p p o s e d to tbe assembly into session porters have u.ked the
gresalonal seat from wbicb day night, destroytq an d called for naUoowide civil Robles' iOveTDmeot to draft reforms in the elec· Supreme Court to rule on
be wu excluded. of resistance -understood to Hildegrande Nicosia. the toral law. a lower court injunction
Tbe former congressman damagin& wide MCtioat mean a general irtrike -union's secretary-general. But he did not take the against the auembly's pro·
also aakl he would meet this admlniltrativt capital in support of the anembly's was among scores of customary step of new ceedings.
with bl.a chtn'Ch members city of Laos. ~ decision to convict Robles demonstrators reported ar· presidents -changing ttie The opposition, beaded by April 7 to .c.1ueld\ a move· No casualty niurea ·~re of .. ....,,. .. •titutional political _,_ .. ln fr nt r sitl th ~ """ Ar. 1-1-bl ~hi t available, but aut.borttlea ...... v.... re<KCU o o oppo on command of e ,,UV\l"man tas, C&&ms the aaaem y
ment to oust m H pas or feared the toll of dead an d activity and swpend him headquarters. Nicosia told National Guard. Is beyond the reach of any
of the church he and his injured would be bJ.&'b. The from oftlce. newsmen he thought be was Guardsmen stood watch in court.
fatber have led for 61 years. twister hit wittlout warnlng A m a k e · o r · b r e a k the only ofticia1 arrested. the square outside t h e Delvalle sllid be had
In an apparent .Uwion to bo t 7 an showdown s e e m e d im-With 12 minority deputies assembly building during neither 'F,~tiat.ed nor en-... _ l .a •• .....:-g .. :5 a u :_. p.m. "Y'
Un> movemen \11.Llw w orn-1-1-at the .t...,.rt minent. The Na ti on a 1 staying away fTom the im-Sund...,'s voting. Crowds of couraged ' the pre a en t sermon, he said: "Jesus had cuua ... !"' -.1 said 31 planes were destroy· Guard, !tie nation's only peachm«1t proceedings, the demonstrators opposed to ' ' special circumstances.''
one Jud•s, and I've got ed or heavily damased, in· rrulitary force, already had assembly voted 30-0 Sunday Robles mJlled in nearby He aaked Panamanl.ans for
about S,000." eluding 71 belongLD( to announced it could not obey to convict Rob~s or charges streets. When guard rein· "a common effort tbaat will
Powell, 59, Who was flank· American eootrl!Ot altllnea the assembly decision and brought by his opponents -farcement.s raced into the permit us to OV«'COlDe the
ed by a doien young that fly rice and m111ttt!ons said it would await an opi.· that he influenced the selec· area, a burst of gunfire was crisis we now confroat."
bodyguards during bis1..-iiiiilllliilliiiiiiiiiiiilliiill .... iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiimliimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ...... lliiiii ........... lmli sermon, tokl his audience:
"Many oburch officials said
I would never come back
here. You thought I was
lost. but now I'm found."
The l8?1DOJ\ was entiUed
"U a man falls, ~ shall
rise ag ai.n. "
* * * * * * VOTE APRIL 9 * * * * * *
Re-Elect a Businessman
Powell to Launch Fight With PROVEN Ability! WASHING TON (UPI) -ging political ima&e. bNded
Adam Clayton Powe». fresh for Washington today to
trom a whirlwind homecom· map the legal ltrat.es:Y he
lng lbat bolstered his ••&· hopes will return him to
Parents Doubt Letter
From Son on Pueblo
TOKYO (AP) -North
Korea continued today t6
release appeall Jt A.id wer•
1'1'itten bf crewmen ol the
captured USS PUeblo, but
the parents of ooe crewman
said the letter they received
wasn't phrued the way
Cheir IOJ1 talk.a.
In Niles; m .. Mr. and Mrs.
Cbetter F. Rogala agretd
the Jetter WU in tbt
it baa described u appull
by the Pueblo crewmen for
the U.S. 1Dvermnent t. ~
cept North I..m tenm. to
win Nlellee f« 1be Cid.
The North ~ claim
tbe Pueblo WM spying nl
t b e i r terribial waten.
They demand an apology
and a promJ.e of no apying
apimt tbem ID the tubzre.
Undwriting o1 their aon. New r-!-.:,.. SeaJJ'at1 Appnn. Ricbard J. \...d"Jal8
Rogala.
Bot Rogala noted that btl
SOD referred four ttmu fO
the "Democratic People'•
Repuijic of Korea."
Developing
In Mideast "Now I know be wouldn't
talk about Norih Kotea that
way unlesl be wu made U.ttd Prell btt.enadinal
to do IO," Rocala aatd. Jorda and llrael, ea,
He aJlo was puzzled over cban1ect morm and 8'tll-
a statement in the letter Iery tire twice tod.11 -tl'8
that the Pueblo was "ex-Jordan Jtiver Valley, a Jor-
actly 7.8 miles from tbeir dan1an miUtary spokesman
(Korea'•) coeat" when tbe annoanced in Amman. Kln&
ship and its 82 crewmen Bua.ha eummOlM!ld bill akl-
were captured Jan. 23. a to ~-tbe tWWelt
"How would be lnaw H · crUll .Ill the Middle Eut.
acUy bow far the abJp wu 8btJi ~ spurned a _.
from the Koi;ean cout antm«>ua. U. N. Se c u r f.t y
unless aomeone told hlnl and CouJtcil ra.tution condemn.
made him write it dOW,D'?" m, I~ by name for her
Rogala asked. . ' pUpJU.. iafd a,.m.t )or.
North Korea'C' • Tf i'cl '1 · dan tut 'lh~ and de-
Korean ~al New1 ~-plor1.nl . •by inference Arab
cy -KCNA -~.lk temNt tiolatiom of tb e
tut of tetten attributed to ceue-ftre.
Seaman Roam s • n A • f . • .Jordanian mWtary
a1o11g wtth lefters eftrlbcted apotesman Aid Isr•l op-to Lawrence WUllaJD Mack ened fire with three-Inch
of Detroit. mortars near the vtllace of
Tbe acency broadcast five Makhfar Al.Qarn In the
more letten today, brinliJll Jordan V.UV lllllll tUt Jar.
to ?.a the number of w~ dan rem.f 1119 &e.
coagre11 u Harlem's
r epretenlati ve.
Tbe irrespresaible Powell
planned to 1 t o p in
W asbington on his way back
to Bimini, the Bahamian isle
wbic:h baa IUbaUtuted foe
home ever 1tnoe Mardi 1,
lt8'1. On that Ute, the
HoaM excluded him for
alleeed11 m1HllnC travel
and payroll fundl and for brtnlinl dilc:redit u p o n
Congrea u the result of
a lont...tandlot defamation
•ult..
Wbn. t a Wuhington.
Powell ~ to ccmter
,,. attorne11 repretenting
.bllDt
AaHdatM here &aid they dou~ -but didn't en·
tirelJ rule out the possibility
-that Powell would try
to reclaim hll Houae seat
by 1eeklnC edmil&ion as the
winner of a lp«ial election
held April 11, 1917, to fill
the vacancy clUled by his
exclusion.
Instead, be WU' expected
to confer wittt lawyers on
his effort to regain tbe teat
through the coarta. A U.S.
Distriet Court jud19 and the
Court of Appeal.a here have rua.cs againlt p 0 w • 11 •
upbol4tng the House's action
ill ercludini hhn for the
duration of the 9 0 t b
Coogretl.
Cbock Stone. P o we 11 ' s
press secretary when he
was a Houff member. said
he expecW the 59-year-old
preacber1>0litlctan w o u I d
spend tbe daJ here before
returning to Btmlni.
Stone and Mrs. Jean Cam·
per cabn annoqnc.'fJd that
Powell wouJd begia a speak·
ing tour of IOUthern and
eastern cotleges tbl.s ~ek.
The schedule calls for him
to JP8aX at the Untvenity
of Florida oo March :.>,
Florida AltM on March 31,
D u k e Unlvenity April 8,
Howard Unlverlity here on
April 1, and Amherst Collete
April Jud 4.
P •• DEE COO
MY PUDGE:
Continued honest, forward-lookin9 9overn•
ment increased efficiency, lower texes, feir,
court1•ous end equal trHtment to •If citiJ:ens,
objective policy forrnul•tion, support of better
educ•tion. cooperative relationship betwHn
Council, staff and ~he people of Newport a .. ch.
DH COOK.
10 years Newport a..cJI r.Mdettt
and ltnlnesamcnt
Y"' Incumbent City Concllmoft
CITY COUNCIL -NEWPORT BEACH
He H™ Served You Well! * He Is an independent candidate he owes no
alle«Jiance to any special CJroup or organisation. * 20 Years a lusinessman In Newport leadt--
45 Years a Resident of Ora11CJ9 Coanty * With courage and foresitht he has acted for two
terms in the best interest of the entire community. * A watchdocJ of your tax dollar, he will continue to
fi9ht for the taxpayer and property owner. * He is for maintaining high quality education for
which Newport Beach has been famed In the
past, while eiercising prudence In budgeting.
Wherever You Live-VOTE FOR COOK
P. D. (DEE) COOK I x
INCUMBENT
loln T•ue Nnoport Beach TG%JH1t1er• Wlao Support Tile · ReEleetloft
of thb Donat, Bard-Working, ltulependetat CouneUtnan:
...... ~
Pwtee T. flkClthtM
w...w.McOe-"
Mr. t Mn. hfMI Mcll••Y
..... L McllltMll
..... f .M&ll• .......,c. .........
Mr. • Mn. 0...W I. McM1d•I
Mr.tMft. ...... J.M•tl•Y .., ....... ....., ... .._"* .. ....., ..........
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a.tillW ........
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..... °'*'911
Mr.a ..... .._.J.O
Space pennlts Oftly • pmrtlal Rst of etMlon«s . ... ,.,... ....... ~...-""",.... " ..... ,..,...
he.Ll'wffht
Mr. a Mrt. ~ ,...,_
Mr.& Mra. •""
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..
,
1J DAil Y 'ILOT llond.01 M#dl 25, 1961
fighting Guides Rate ·
Of Calls to Vietnam
"When thtnt• are quiet,
and there'• not much
fightin&. we ml'J &et &J
many M 200 calll per
night."
Suen II the .aatu GI io.a
distance pbooe callJ to and
from Saigon, according to
Mrs. Patricia Abbey, chief
Jong distance operator in ·
Oaklaad.
P1ac:iDc ...... can. to
peopie. d vlliu .. military t
iJ Saigon ia DO problem for
Mrs. Abbe}. "If someone
want.I to call Sallon. aB they
haff to do ii dial the
operator and tell ber W'hat
they want She'll connect
them with as, and .,,. boot
the call tbroqp to the USO
ln 8aJIOD.
''The person 1bou1d know
about the call ahead of time
10 that they CM be there
wt.ea It comes. C>therwbe,
a m11aage ls placid oa ta. -.aa board. ud .. eel
can be put throqgh u 10011
u the recipient arrives,"
a.be Wd.
'l1te drlef opeltor U •
platned thllt caBI CGminl
frcl:n Viltum to 1he U. S.
are mare frequent beclu.M
t.bey •e Uliw to make.
"Wlth a 24-bour military
curfew bein1 enb'ced, it
il.!l't euy for people to get
around wtien they want to,''
lbe taid. "It's much easier
fer them to call out than
to try •Dd locate them when
cal.int m."
$2.00
CAN START YOU IN BUSINESS
SEE and IHVESTIGATE SO dlffarwrt business
opportunlt-. TALK dl1'9Ctly to the exec:u·
tNel of lhlle comp..-iiea.
..... 21. 2', JO, JI
~. 1·1t r.M. S-., 19' P.M.
W•R I mMSS SHIW
~H01'11.
M:J ii• $IAO
The Daily Pilot Best In The West
WANTED
THE MAN whe can di• ..... our city cound --in plannincJ NEWP.ORt IEAOf of toniorrow -
who un trensfer words into Kt;on.
ED HIRTH
THE MAN
FOR COUNCU.:
NIWPOltT HACH
~--Mn. ,...... ......
Dr. o..tll .. ANt-. "· "" ...... ..............
Of ............... .._ Mn.....,, L..a......
Mn. ...... Ame
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Mrl. ....... L. ....
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Dell •• ..,... ......... .._ .. ....... '*· .. Mn.. ..... ,._ ""' -··-------,,.,_ ....... -·· 9ltdl Ml ................ ..... ..... """' ......... Mn.*"9 .. .__ 1.c . .,_
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with
The PLAN
,., r..,..,,... .• City
With T .. y'1 "•nnlng
SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS -Lyn Goiter ol 1.acum Buch and Neil Mayfield of
Newport Beach (right) dilc1.111 their Bank ol America Junior College Bu.Ulesl
Awards Mth Charles Haley, dWrman of the Bnslvta Educatioo Department at
OCC. Miss Golt.er and Mayfield bc*1 won $300 Kbolarships.
2 Students
Win Honors
From Bank
Two Orqe Coast College
.tudents, Nell L. Mayfield
ol Newpc:rt Beach and Lyn
Goiter GI Llguna Beach
have won '300 casb awarda
tn 1he Bank ol America's
Junior College B u s I n e s s
Awards Program.
'lbef will be ginn their
awards alone with all ,._
_., from So11th1rn
Califonaa Junior coDeges .t
a 1lardl 15 banquet at the
Beverly-Hilton Hotel.
Miss Goiter wo:n her
Mrard 1n tbe MCiftlrlal and
clerical studies di"1aion. A
eecrietarlal traWnc major.
Misc Gotter gr.eduated from ooc in J'tbrury and pi.na
to coatiaae her 9Chooling.
Mayfield won in the bank·
log and b u 1 1 n e s s ad·
mi n ii tr a ti o n studies
dtvtsion. A bosiness ad-
ministration major, he will
graduate from ocx; in June a plms to continue his
ltDclea at USC.
Expectant
Mothers
Warned
Dr. Emma Wharton, chier ot the maternal and child
care division of the Orange
County Health Department.
and a member of the Na-
tional Foundation-March of
Dimes, today urged caution
in any self-medication by
preinant women especially
during the first months of
prepancy.
Dr. Wharton's statement
WU baaed on a recent report
frcm the March of Dimes-
supported medical team at
Baylor University
Tbe Teua team followed
l40 pregnant women from
their first visit to a doctor
until after delivery. The re·
search«'s found that 118
were exposed to 380 possible
defect-eausing agents. dur-
ing the crucial fint three
months.
At birth etgbt babies of
these Z40 women had ser·
tou1 defecbl, and 18 had mi·
nor defects. ''Avoidable t:I·
~ to pocaible defect·
causing 11ents. eapeclally
drugs. is a must," Dr. Wbar·
ton aid.
CdM High Students
Take Speech Laurels
Ten Corona del Mar High
School speakers _.. ._...
at the V araity Sprtnc Speech
Tounwmeat, beld recentty
at Magnolia a Sennna
High Scboall me.. Anaheim
Unlon ScDool Diltrict.
Highest awards f o r
Corona del Mar High School were wcm by sophomore
Paul Semone, with a aecond
TV, Film
Stars at
Beauty Fete
TelevUion and mOYie ltln
will be among the judgea
for the Miss Junior Ach.Jeve·
ment Contest of Southern
California for 19e8.
Included on tbl panel will
be Susa Bay Go cMtar·
red with Jwry Lewil in
"The Bil Mouth"; KatbJ
Garver, tbe tMDICJld "Cit·
sy" in CBS'1 ''Faml11 Al·
fair"; Mib Miner who has
the role GI "~ve'' in "Pet·
ticoat Junction" on CBS.
Other judges wiJI be Mark
Slade. wbo starred u the
young cowboy "Blue", on
NBC'a ''Blib Chaparral'';
Robert Nk!bola, fbwldal ed-
itor of tbe Loi Aqeles
Times; ad Jack Thayer,
general manqer ol KI.AC
Radio.
The Mill JA Contest will
be th• bigblight ol th•
Achievtn' Eucutive Ball at
the Beverty Hilton Hotel in
Beverly Hills, Friday.
Amon& U.. m flnaliatl fOl'
Miss JA ii Barbara Frazer,
15, of Santa Ana.
Publication
Lists Lagunan
Laauna resident. Ran D.
Davit, mG Alaaode.r Road,
has been aelec~ to appear
1J1 ~ 1968 edition ot Com-
munity Leadeni in America,
~ding to a publiut1on
spokesman.
The public£Uoa includes a
list ot various community
leaders from tlm:Jugbout the
U.S. who, becauH of their
put ~menta a n d
service, are recognlud a~
community le..ters o r
Arnet'tca.
place for his Oraf()rical
JnterpretMioa of Presideet
JohDSOll'I epeech on the
death ol Jahla F. Kennedy,
and amlGr Emmett Raitt,
who recelwd •econd place
honon for h1I dramatic U·
cerpt from "A Thousand
Clowns."
Jmicr Steve Jump woo
two third place certificates
for OrlliMl Orat-Ory and
0 r a t o r i c a I Analysis.
Sophomore Christy Cote
and jwior J~ Mill« plac·
ed th.i.rd in the Dramatic
Interpretation.
Humorists Jlldce Hart
and Paul DcnmJM alto
P'aced third, • d i d
tophomore Amald Clark .in
the Impromptu Speakinc.
sophom<ftl Kit Edison and
Burton Ray won second
place certificates for their
effol'ts in Novice Debate.
2 on Coast
To Attend
Peru Meet
Edward W. Smith and
Dr. Paul E. Rodriguez both
of Ccrona del Mar are
among the California dele-
ptea to the Tblrd Annual
fnter-American Conference
ol tbe Partners of the Alli-
ance, to be held March 31
Msch 31 throup April 4 iD
Uma, Peru.
Deleptes from 33 states
and the Diltrict al Columbia
wDl travel to Peru to m
the um• nmnber of del·
eptel from 34 states ar arua in Latin America.
The Partners of the Alli·
ance were qanised in 1964
to provide a s t r u c t u r •
wbereby the private citizens
ol the Amerfcu could orig·
lnate and cany out pro-
pama ot 1oclaJ and eco-
nomic development through
reciprocal action .
Tbe rast thre. years of
the a 1 i a n c e have seen
acboolt and hospitala built
md p r o • 1 d e d with mod·
en • q u i p m e n t ; water
e;wdutta and roads con·
structed to remote villages,
modern farming methods
introduced, the instruction
and exchange of both teach·
en and students. and buai·
nea ventures explored with
aatilfactarJ reaults .
The
Calarl'ul
Soullil of
OPllllll•
Coun_,
M .. lcl
RADIO KOCM
103.1 FM
UC Fees, Tuition EXj_illinefl
lit Pia~ Won
By Mesa Group
"The Pr-ofita," a C.O.ta
Me.sa rock p-oap, IOOffd
fint plaee ID the recent Bat·
tle of 4be Bands at Oocta
Me.sa ffith Scbool.
SeftD~kl the neat by the
Mu Eta Chapter ol bett.a
1bm T.au Sor«ity wbich
will donate all proceeds to
dte Orqe County ~
.,.. • ~ Ou.NCI 10 ..
A NB MODIUM9 COUltSI PttOM
GWEN'S SOIOOL OF CHARM,
A .. certl..,_ from
YOUNGUND ..... ,.,.,..,. -.y
URSON PHOTOGRAPHY '="
Me _ ......................... ..
SAT\MDAY, MAltCff 30th,
.. .-.11:00 ....
1R H.w C.....-23IO Herber llYd.
MANI .................................... AM •••••••••
..._ ............................................ .
PNCMll ••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••
of .the ~ileps7 Society. llYUIM 'IG:
"The Lovin Bunch" won Gw.n's School of Chmn ancl Model ...
second place hono!"' and the 2955 Harta.r 11¥ct Cotta Met.a 546-9913 I "Deep Blue" received third. _____ _: ________ --'
Jr oin tfJt easter Jarabt to 6ilbtrluoob'
meet Dennis Ralstiln
today-at our Century City store, 7.'CXJ-9.-<XJ,·
tomorrow-at our Fashion bland,
Newport Beach Jtore, 2.·00-4,()()
l
t:
d
(
8
t
F
t
t c
a
l
F
ii
l
I:
J· u
-
mmn CUPr> ->. ........ • ., ..... , \.mart
Ui~-... ndal pre.I•• _. ruhre
m1'"0Tit1 1roupt to tbel.r
n rut )lllil:e ta toeiety
m .• be....,.... at 09(ll,
say1 Arfbw Phmmh1
former U. S. secretary of
health, educatioa • a d
welfare.
"We must Jtcip fiddling
while OtD' cftla lMzrn. ''
warned !'lmmlnt~ wt1o b
now prelldent ol the Na-
tionlll Council of Churches
al!d president ol t b e
Uaivenit,y of Oregon.
Re 1ave tbe keynote ~
dre• Sand_, Jd&bl at the
opening of a three-day
Unlvu&ity of California
sympoaiam on "Plttttnt of
American Prejudice," held
in C0J1Jundion with the
university's 10 0th an·
nlnrsary cei.br atioD.
Flemming caJted t h e
prelidentlal oommiuion'•
report oa lut ·•um.mer"• rlota "ooe of the moat
a.lpiftcaot public docwnents
In my ltteUme'' and ooted
tt>e report eoncluded that
''white radlm" ... 1ID
blame. •·we mut pJ8ad guilty to
the char1t of racism,"
Ftem.m.tq asserted, to the
applaUM of the predom,i.
naot1Y white audience ct~
en1 bmdred. oa the Berte. Jer campus.
F1emming called OD al Americans to ''face ud ac-
cept tbe indictment" eves
tboQ&ll the report'• con-
clusions are being de.Died,
sometimes by ''penoal iB
important places ...
Flemming s a i d the
answer to prejudice is a
"massive educational ef·
fort" which 1bould be begun
at ooce by ·A m e r i c a n
universitleJ, c b u r c b e s ,
businell, labor, the eovern·
meat and the mass media.
University Begins Its
Second Hundred Years
BERKELEY (AP) -The
Um..-stty o f OalilonUa
began its second century to-
day after Centennial
CbaN1' Day ceremonies
Saturday marted by plan·
ting of a time oapsule and
a redwood tree.
AbcU 9,0C» I t u d e n t I •
alumni and feculty mem·
bera gathered in the open·
air Greek Theater on the
Berkeley campus to join in
the big birthday celebration.
Chief Justke Earl War·
ren, a 1912 UC graduate use Journalism ~ =rni~deo=
T _ -tructor Di-.,.. unlocking many of the
i.iut ""'° secrets of outer space but
hawn't learned how to aet
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -alonl with their nm door
Ro7 L. 1'reocb. fomder Of ~r il his race or
the ~ Of joanaJilm at religion is different.
the Un.iftn1tJ et Soutbtm A 11 o c ia t e J u 1 t I c e
Callfomia, .ii dNd at 1be Tbargooct Marshall, first
age of 71. Neo-o appointed to the U.S.
French, who "*-I from Slqnme Court, and Roy
USC In Ull, died SaturdaJ. Wlidnl, executive secretary
Fune'l"al arr....,.k were of the National Association
ineomplek J'redl came to for the Advucement ol
USC in 1927 ud five yeen ·Colored People, ~ the
later f~ the ldlool of rottrum, dwelling on racial
journalialli wtlich be lleMed ~ems facinc 1he nation
unil bis ndrtment. tOd'y and In the future .
Marij1:1ana
Laws CaJJed
Unrealistic
SAN FRANCIS<X> (UPI)
-Tbere la 80 t'ric1ence of
a relaUouttfp b e t • e e n
marijuma and crime • that
the 11.1e ol marijaane lMds
to drut ldd.ictioa. according
to a fectel'al p:'OblUon of.
fleer.
Bowenr, Off.iC« Ro,er
SmJtb Will Sanday botb con-
tmttom prenil and the
ren.tt ll ''leYete IDd wholly
11111'..u.tk" Jeclstatjon pro-
hlblUng the use and sale
of marijuana.
Smith, wtao alao iectlres
for the University o l
CaUiorni.a ~ service
told a marijuana sym·
pollam at lbe UC Medk:al
Centc' 4ls.at "an extremely
ellHltioMl ... ,,.,..'" .. led to
the federal .,.,,.rijulna
JeOalaU. ... -Ile boob.
The oppanenb of mari-
juana blamed tbe drug for
murder, npe ..t "all man·
aer of horrible sex crimec."
Smith Aid. He added this
view waa pvea credence in
•• <Sflll:Ntlooal hom>I" st oms
link..ing pot with violent
er~" ia the nation's press.
"The public e~ntually
came to believt It," Smith
Mid. ud tbe result hal been
to compoaad tht marijuana
...-1em rather IMf1
alleviate It.
"It' I I ID<ll' ality confl let
in w!licb emotloll is m<>re
important .... fact," be
said. "Lelillatioo relating
to individual m o r a l it y
escalates the problem .••
if 1t were otbenriJe, mari-juana would be almost
unheard cl today."
_.,,__ __ ..,.,a..s...-.,...._..-..~'-'•..,...., __ ........... ,_ ........ _...., __ .., __ ........ ,
MilWS 10"' "°"1oble lfode.ltt,
llCJtvralty. So h«ld f9f ,..,
Ot••OW.4-ltr'• ... ..................
Time Runs
Out at 105
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
A preroonitioo !bat "th.ii ls
my time" preceded by
several hours Sunday the
death ol Damiana Espin·
dola, a Mexican-American
woman who was U~ years
old by her own reckoning.
Mrs. Espindola t o l d
members of her famlly, "I
feel poorly and this ia my
time,·• and uted that all
her relatiYe& gather at her
home in the Boyle Helgbtl
District.
However only f o u r
relatiYel Weft praent when
she died.
She was born In Durango,
Mexico, in 1862, according
to her family, and bad 16
children, ooly four of wbom
survived her.
..,.,.
WATCH REPAIR
1.0 ~ .ff ••••• •' ..., -kh re,.Jr ....
tilt. c .. ~ fw +lltee 4..,. ettly.
"NI JIWILl"f DI".
........ ~_. .. Utt Cl .....
SLACKS
$1.50
Ow .... $1 .71 & $1.97
Sina 4-14 111 !.ri9ht f•tlliu celora-yell-,
,i11•, OqH.
LADlll W•AR Dl'1'.
s,.cw
MAit.
U-J'-27
Lube & 011 Change
$1.99
Y Ollr chelce of thru 111ejor ~ran.ls of oil
io 20 wt. er )0 wl.
Wllllt ~MAa. o.......... Cl lf.2'47
Lari
Polaroid@ 101
COLOR FILM
$3.77
$5.l5 Value
Ow l"uktr 71c
CRACKER JACK®
O.l ..... 27c
CANDY DI".
ii
..... SWt ......
SPORT SHIRTS
99-
0. .... 1.67 ... 2/$1
......, • ....... .,_ Mllert .. • wl.le
•.n.tJ .,f celrs & atylu. 5"•1 S-M·L-XL. u.it ).
MDn WIAa DI". ..... .... ..... ....., ... . .......
CHEST $9.97
0. .... $11.t7
rte-uiwl.4 .. 4',ee4y te f1.M1I., tMt clte.t _ ... ,.. 24"wl l"wl4",
HOMI IMNOYIMINT DI".
RADIO
$4.44
Our ltt. $5.47
Comes with b•ltety, .. ,phone uJ cerry•
i1tt cue.
SMALL AP,LIANCI DI".
M ....
WASTE CANS 67¢
Ow ...... Mc
S1ull u o ia t•e•I io ltath, ltadree111, er
•tility .......
HOUHWAlllH DI".
200..CO-t
NAPKINS 33¢
Ow ...... 44c
t..11chao11 oepkin1 with hell'e ,,.. Jt1i9111.
,AlllTY OOOOI DIP'T.
,_, lellef
ALKA SELTZER
47¢
°"' ...... '7c
TOILITTI AlllTICLU DI".
. -.__... .........
DAILY mar
...... .,. ......
DRESS SHOES
$1.88
c..,.. flll $l."
~ ., yMt little ..,., eyu witfi • ,.Ir
., ...... ~ *"aall-.
lffOI DI". .... ...... ....... ~
Wit
0.. ...
RUBBER RAFT
$12.97
0. .... $14.f7
l11fl•tel>le roft la 1'6" INt !.y l' widt.
IPOttTtMG ec>DOS DI". ....
.....
TY TRAYS
67¢
Ow ....... t7c
. ....
DIXIE~ CUPS 57¢
Ow ...... 71c
'u+.I celOf'M 5 °"' c•pa ere ,..,.11+"4
te Rt tht Ohrt• tli1,. ... ,.
,ARTY .OODI DIP'T.
6.....-u L.tt.
Head & Shoulders
Ow ...... $1.07
TOILITTI ARTICLU °'"·
on1, APRIL. FOOLS
will miss KMARTS' big sale on MONDAY
-APRIL 1st from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Don't YOU B·e lne!
--••• ana ca l.';illliillliliii.,._
For The
l:ecord
_..,,._ a..ca
4 71 a m s.4\HdllY, Ut flto,
Cvoreu Aw
l 41 o "' • Ut llro, 1Nt1 Main St J 40 o m Jundly, ,_.,., 17Jll Moll
Clrdo I " o m ,_ ltlt, u .. l.oM
3 ,. • "' • ·-..... ..,, .-.. Cl~o
' " p"' • .., fire. 1n.n ·--~
7 lJ p "' • •"10llne • ..-. Gol69n _, Sl<"eet -.,,.,._ A-
S..I ·-) J7 pm. s.l\lnMY, slrvdwt ""·
1:1171 ,.,_,...,. ·-~ o "' Su_.,, cer llN, 11' 7'11 W-IM-• lO "m S.luro.ty, medlul alcl. 1111
~. Mll'dl 25, 1%8
'Cow'llOJI' on Canvas
Paul Weber Jr., who, with Robert Wagoner, is fea-
tured in current two-man sbow at art gallery in
Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana, relaxes in front of
some of his work. He and Wagoner roam the South-
~ painting canvases of subjects which realistic-
ally reflect the atmosphere of the Old West. Show
will be on display through April 8.
~el~SI ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
10 I• om , 1110 '"'",iio.lloft, !151
ltuc-1 .. AVO
) lj • m Suncl9Y, !Ndt<tl .. d, '311
C..'(V9.t Dt lvo
I «I pm • -flto, 7JO! A•I Dtlvt
I DI • m Mo•.On. ur llrt. S." 0 1..., ,,_,,. el Gerclln Cf'OVo
1111.,•t<lfon
P-lale V1llrr )"03 • m lu.,...y, rned!COll 114. 17737
811t""n! SI
• 11 o m. "''"' "''• '"JI ""'Onollo SI.
' 11 p m , medlcel aid, 1 OClll a... t'oblo c-Mell l ·U am. $Mvrdly, ,_ lllO IKtr
"· 1 .w om. S.111*•· -"°"' a E. 17"1 SI
7:JI Im ....... -... C--· SI
t 33 o m , oor tire, 11111 MrMI -~-""" '°"'""'"' II·~ 1.m, -• lk'e, ,.., Ill -Woy I 4' p m • ,....,., 1111 /W;JfttWr,,..,
l"l1 pm. ,,_ 11,., ,._. fll
Al\elhe1m Ave
I ll o m , tnlll 11'9. llM °"" 1t11 ......_, .,,. ..
DEA'J'll NOTICES
SCHAEFER
-. ~ Sctleefer. u•n L• ,_
SI, ,..-~ Vellw. Jun""" lw -
bend, Lou.. P.1 --. LOUii I' SclMl9fer1 ~ .... NA. _., ~
Walleca1 ..-. M191 ....... ~I
-"'"' on<*f\lldtefl. llcaorv -re<ilfd 5';ndoy, 7•1f PM at l'-
FamllY ~I P-91 -· ,,..H Wll c.-lllod 11111 mot'ft .... , MondoY,
' AM el 91. 1t..wn Caltlollc Cllurch, ~,. AN. Ol~od ..., ..... Fomlfy ~-· "-•I Home. WALDRON
llllcNnl C w.-. Formertv O!
Student Starts Now
Working at Her Job
FULLERTON -Mary
Koehler of Whittier is one
student who didn't wait until
she got out o( school to
put her craft to work.
A senior communications
major at Cal S t a t e
Fullerton, Mrs. K o e b I e r
created and assembled a
teaching unit design~ to
help high school teachers
present baste lnlormation
about newspapers and the
news media to t h e 1 r
students.
W..lml,.,er S..rvlnd bv 1" 0 SHE DIDN'T WAIT 111""'"", Merv ... .i l!arnnt aM
She undertook the project
to aid Sigma Delta Chi
(SOX ), national journalistic
society, in an effort to ex-
tend the usefulness of a 21-
minute SOX film "That the
People Shall Know ." The
new film telli about careers
in journalism. Lontta s c 11o"1 • 1 '"° 11.. Mary Koehler 9rMlllCNlclron Sorvkn. 'TuMdly. l
,.M, l't• Fo"'lly Colonlol Fu-al ------------
-BATES DEATH NOTICES
"At first I just planned
to develop a guide to the
film .'' Mrs. Koehler ex-
plained. "But when I in-
vestigated the full potential
o( the film. I h!ll a greater
number C>f students could
belli?ftt by t>xpand.mg the
ideas 1n use~ and im·
portance of the m a s s
media "
,, ...... Cf c. I01H 17551... l'lae@'llll
AYf , Coolo -• SVNl•od by wllo, Carrlfl lour ..,..., lvlord, -.,,ow
Eurllt .,,. Cleronn: """ brO!llfft. l.,.,l>le, n.--9111, lwo >11110. II-l " H\il(tlltOft tnd lo -.,
•"" "'.,. erol!Cklllldrlf! larvl<n will
'>t hftl In 8~"*''· Ml•"•hlc>• Local ..,,.,_I• 1w I'-FomllY Co4onitl rv.,...1-
HANSEN
lowronc• Wiiiiam H•~ A~ 61,
of '*'" ~tune. N-1 1-11 W.v•...., !>'I •ilt 'T"'"'· '°" CNlrlft M Hlft-. JU )61!1 $1 NtwPOr'I
&""<" \Of"I L•wrenct 'ilew Yon
Mu911tH, Ttnl H-. fl/ 1!1t -· brot,,., CMt•• H H•nwn; 1•1ter ..
norone> H-bol!I O! M"ml Flo
•nd one Ottncld>lld ltOUrY Tvtt<NY • l'M, WMltlln ,_ llOQ11'9m Meu.
w~v 11 AM Dllr UOdy of
Ml (....,,.. C..,,..k Cllurdl. N-rl
Btocll 1"'-1 HolV St""ldltf ( .......... WMlcliH _, ... ry .........
OIMK10M
WATSON
rprr1, W•''°"' tU V1c1ori1. Cm•• M-wvtcn l>tnd°"O -.1cn11
Mon~, ....._...* Olrtctor1.
HOUSE J""" lloolool ~w ,.._. n. .,, 1'11 lrvlM Ave , It-' ltadl Survived
bv wj,., Cenrllde. fl/ 1111 llomt;
<»uonttr IM1V '"""" ~vblll, O! Ctnll-; , .. 1.,, Mrs. Evo Morlllltm.
l'onllac. M I c h ' • • "' encl row r
trtlldcNld"n S..•ICH• TUftdly, 1
t'M, Wulcllff CNt""I. \lhltooflofl, --
OOY. 11111 OVtnift9, 1 lo t l"!tt-t\I,
lllrml"91on, MICl'lloon Wt 1 I c I I I I
Moorf\>Ory, ..._ .... OlflC1on.
BALTZ MORTIJARIES
C.rna del Mar OR l-t451
CNta Men Ml 1-!4!4
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
I lt Broadway, Cotta Mua
LI I-USS
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARIC t.emetery ... .......,
-~~Drtft Nl..,.n Be11e•, CaUf....ta
Mt.ml
PEEX FAMILY
COLONIAL roNERAL ROME
•1 Belu An. w-. ........
PdTlrl llOlmJAaY ., ...... ··r.:'
llORTVAJlY .... c.ca ... ...
LUTHER
£1111~!11 Adel-Lul!I... AM 11,
o1 no W IJ!tl SI , Now-' 11..ch.
Poued -\I Morell ti $urvlvod bv
-· L_,. 'Ti.t.-lldPnl IOI', JoM Lu-: lour oraNkhltcl'°"I lour1,..,
0<•"'-11rendclllldr..,: tour ~ aM
Ill.... IWl'n WvKH, W-Y • II AM, llollt Mor1uorv. 17'1 Sufftlor,
Coo•• -. lnte,_ Olivo Lawn
C•mt'f..-... Lot Mir-Collf. !Miit Mortuorv. Olrwc1<><>
ENDRES
Carll°" J E"""'" Atr 4" of 121
J.Yt. SI • M--1 8-h Survlvfel
b¥ -.1f1, lvcltlt, Ne~t 1-.ch.
·-Ja....,. Ov II-Monti Hollv-""° brolflon. LOllll E-..,
Toxu. -Ooc EllClrl\. N-•>11•
Prlv•"" wrv'<9s l"f ft.eltz Mortv•rv, 17•1 S.-lor Coota M .. a
YEAGER
Arnold 11...,...rd VNQ... let E 10ltt
So Co.ta~ PMMd •-v Mo<tll
71 Sur'Y1V9(1 b¥ \Oftl J~~' and
G .... kl. -of (0011 -·· broflwr. wmio .... "' Phll•clelfllll<I, ,_ ,.,,,,.,
Miu Lucy YH'ler. Olllo. ..,., Mrs
Leulst Kln41, W°""l"OfO<I, 0 C
Olrecll"d by 8•11 ,,.,..,.....y, MOl'tuorv.
110 llr-y, C""ta Mh•
CHRISTENSON
C l\of IM Chris II'""'" 1'63 F fClt< at, C-Mftl Sttv1Clf1 POndl"9. 1•11
11,,,..,_Y Mof1\Nlrv 110 llr-ey,
Cm• MoM
McC'LOY
Muri.4 Ell"" M<Cloy Soll Ill tw•
So . 1(......,., Ontario. C•n.tek Pu•f'd
-y Mordl ?l. $urvlVH by ltylboftd,
Ch<trln S.•l<t> •nd lnur,.,...ftt In
1(-Poclll< "'"'" M 0 , I u • r y •
-•rcllno d1'"'""' KOKOWlCZ
It_..., 1Ca1u,..1a A4" "' -
·--?t Mv,.. ... '" -· 11••-oftd --'> OICI tl-ler.
Kar"'; --.. n.--ftlloH "' T""'9i. C11Y, Olld C.,I flloott,
0.IPol! Midi-: th!., Mtll<Y N11llef, 0.rn•••w oa,...,h. Ml .,,.. ~ C-
"'' flllott Vl'J•tMloft. ..... i.-.1, 1 t PM
._... """ ... t'KllM 1 41 lot>'9fll ""1 .. C"-' ill~ Mon Tun dly, ' AM. $$ 5-& ,_ ~le °""""· .......,, ... 1.,.. .... ~ "''enM<tl,
MolV Crss ,...,~...., Loo ""'"'" ''"""" _,,,, o~ KOIOWlCZ
E~ Kell-la. AN J; P9ftN ._,.
Manti n Mv1wc1 ti. •-·· 11o....-' ~I. eM II•"'· 1Carw11 er-.
... f't<lft. "'' ond Mrs Clift• Ent""
.... ""' .... Mrs NllC!Mtl °'""' ""' ,.,...., -....., w.m.... 7 to t, wlltl
._., ...... r...:•lltd ., 1:• •1 Smllht °'""' ......... M-. T ... Sdrf. t AM, SS .,,.,_ & J""" c.tllloll< C""r<!I ·~. ,...,., C"fftl C ....... ry l• ........ Sm---,., Olrteton,
The unit •~ designed to
help students learn about
career opporturuties 1n the
field of j o u r n a I 1 s m
responsibtllt.ies o( m a s s
media tn surveying govern-
ment. s1m1larities and dif-
ferences 1 n informal.ion
handled by various media
and the importanet' or com
municaUons to t h e in-
d1 vidual
While working on the unit.
Mrs Koehler conferred with
Paul S Swenssoo. executive
director of The Newspaper
Fund in Princeton, N.J .. and
chairman of ~ S D X
careers committee
··we are very pleased with
the project and are anxious
to put it into ctrculaUoo for
teachers," S•~1<>n said.
Before it 1a made widely
availab~. tbe ll'Dit wH1 ~
field tested ln s c b o o I s
througbout the country Dr
James Alexander of the Cal
State FuDttton faculty. who
dir~ed M rs . Koehler'•
work. baa bttn asked by
SOX to aupemee tbe field
t~g.
"Tbe unit Is primarily
dealgned for n.. teacher
who la Metlna !nforma\lon
a b o u t cammunicatioo.s,"
Mrs. K o e b 1 tr said.
Stops Tormenting
Rectal Itch
Exc:Ju.ift F armila Pawt*t Slape.-..,
~ ud R-.. Pm oi Pile. la Mmt C...
Teaeliers
2nd aass
Ci.:nrA ? 1.incDS.
ANAHEIM -Ttlletlms
fl> o.n strike bemwe Uwy an treated lib w11.1111k1.Ns
citizens, Dr. JJd Prymler,
Ohio State prof...,,. of .tu-
cation. told about 190 Orange
County acbool tras~
Frymier urured Rbool
board members it could hap-
pen here in Oran1e County ll
they don't treat teachers
like profeaslonala.
He spoke lut week to the
Orange C.Ounty School
Boards Auociatfon at Dis-
neyland Rot.el.
STAft APPOrNTll
RObert w. 0....
'l'rustees shOaldl't pre-Seal Beach swne to know ._.. .about
education tbao teecllln, M
warned.
The law set.a boards over
teachers but trusteea;,l'ak•
a mistake in ptts~_ to
know mon about education
than teachers, he said. When
.Man Named
By Reagan
teachers rebel and school Seat Beech ree~ ~
board members try to get w Da .. _ .. ~
tough by u s i n g the l a w, ert · waoa "-~
teachers go right over their named to the oewly formed
heads. " California Advilory Com-
They'll go directly to the mitSion oo Marine and C.0.a-
source of power and money t.a.l ReSOW"cee by Go¥ernor
-the state Legislature Rona.Id Reagan.
and that means statewide Oaw900 who retidel at
negotiation, be sai<S. point-132 Stanf~ Lani Is 111 u -
ing to what has happened sistant caebier kl th. natioD-
in Florida. a1 div11ion at lc>I Angeles
If school boards lean back headquartera d. Bank of
on "the majesty of the law" America.
in their responae to teach-He was assoc~~ with an
ers' appeals for a voice 1n oceanographic res ear c b
education, teacben w i 11 foundaticn for man tl*1 a
resort to ~ 9tnogth year before joming a. b-.t
-a labor unim. 'n.m it be-ID LoQg BfJ8Cb in J.9IL Se-
COIDel a matter of ''what's leciled for a ~
ln it for me," be said. training program in the trust
Treated aa professionals. department, be was assign-
teachers will feel themsel-ed to I.be Lot Angeles dis-
ves bound by a sense of re-trict trust office in 1962 and
sponsibility to the studen~. became an assistant trust
he asserted. officer there a year la~.
CSCF Journalists Chartered
Foot Therapy
For Medicare
SANTA ANA -Foot care
will be ava.Heble t o
Medicare petientl for the
firet time in Mardi, ac-
ccrdlng to oftidals d. Che
Orange County Podiatry
Association.
Spokesmen said signed the
provision into law in the
Social Security
Amendments of 1967.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e An owner of an art pt.
lery to s h a r e gallery
with decorator or com·
patible bulliness.
•Here's a garage salf'!
• Herr's a rollaway shed! It's 8'x35' and 6'x6' •• ,
•A party lost a tennil
racqutl al t.M Lu
Arenas Park and otfera
a reward
e Wherf' to ti n d a pert
timf' position u a book-
keeper ... you will have
full charge and must be
capable of~
monthly statement.
• How would you likf' a
TINY. TINY toy poodle?
Here's one m a rich
shade of c h o c o I a le
brown. Papers and thou
and trained!
Fond11 of llln1r1ca
Now El Rancho invites you to come home
to enjoy the favorite foods of America .••• this week from • • • •
~ mtri('a'I& cookery
M ~ diveraified a., the fift11 datu!
)'ou'll 1cant tM
Deep Soulh rtcipl'I
I eatu.rtd th i~ tettk
at our mrat
counft"r.~'
Jo~ull buncht.a, 1reen and frtah I Cook and auve with batter!
Swiss Chard 2i19
Tendu ••• frail ,,_.a 1-Vtt with criap. ~ at&Ibf
E1tra t~ • • · ••• tolda 1Df;Al ••• DiJJtland fa•onter
...
Mini-Picnics ....... 39~
Smoke cured lean pork •boulder ... so flavorful! .•. As rem.fniacent
of the aouth aa Kinr Cotton or the scent of mimosa on the n.irht air I
Biskit Mix ........ 39c
F.~•· · .40 ounce package .•. bake a batch or light mouth-waterln•
bu1caita ···serve hot, with honey! ... what could be more southern style?
Honey .................. 591
Su)lelior · · · 24 ounce jar ..• nature'• purest aweetener ••• great
10urte of enerol Take pleuure in Clover, Saie or ~ flavonl
Corn Bread Mix 251
Dromedary · • • lkonce pq .... call it Corn Dodpr or lCJbria1 Cab
• •• or bake it in muffin tin.a ••• it'a atill a s:r-t favorite fran Dil:ieJ
... .,
U.S. Has Own Fiscal
Intelligence Agency
WASHINGTON CAP)-The
General Accounting Office
is not like other government
agencies.
Varously described a s
prying, nitpicking. firm.
minded, opinionated, it is a
fiscal intelligence service
that keeps 2.400 auditors
roaming through the sprawl·
ing vastness of the federal
government, looking f o r
waste and for compliance
w i t h congrusiooally •
prescribed p o c k e t b o o k
safeguards.
The comptroller general,
who bead.a GAO, is 2p-
pointed by the President fol'
a 15-year tenn but GAO
belongs to Congteaa. It is
Congress' combined watch-
dog and gadfly e>perattng
on tM executive branch,
and CongN!ss loves it.
ln its most recent mmual
report, GAO claimed lt& ac·
tivitiet saved the taxpayers
$190.l million.
Some adivitiea ol the
federal Io• er n m e n t ,
however, AA exempt from
GAO audit. The super~
Central Jntelligence Agency
and Ndonal Security Agen-
cy are, for obvious ru.sons.
But some C o n g r e s s
members question why the
Fedlral Ra1ne Board and
the .Ulce ol tbe comptroller
ol tbe currency are lbiel.ded
from GAO 1crutln1.
TM Fed and the cornp-
troDer'• office an two of
the tbrtJe. principal ageocies
that t~ise banb. 'lbe
third la the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp., wbicb in·
IUl'U bank deposits.
GAO 1ooU ld'o the affairs
of FDIC, but bu feuded
for year• wit2l that agency
over withholding from its
scrutiny IOIDe information
FDIC 1811 it mUJt keep con·
f.i<MnUal.
Tbe luue of broader GAO
acce'll to the work.mis of
the bank supervilory aien·
cies bas boOed up at bear·
inga by tbe House Banking
Committee on the quality
of bank supervision.
Comptroller G e n e r a 1
Elmer B. St.aau testified
GAO caonot mab a mean-
ingful audit of FDIC under
the p r e s e n t restrictions.
F~ with these, be said,
a private . ~uditing fl.rm
woo.ld ~aw.
Specifically. Staats said,
"we cannot awaise the eC·
fectiveness of t b e ex·
aminations 1D identifying
bank! whose financial coa-
dition is unstable."
Staats' t e s t i m o n y UD·
derstandabl:y got a friendly
reception from Chairman
Wright Patman, D-Tex .• of
the B a 11 k i n g Committee
W'hoee sa!piclon of big banka
and feud with the Federal
Reserve are legend i n
Congress. His efforts t~
enact legislation in line with
U>ese feelings, h o w e v er
have ~t at best uneveo
success.
Some of Patman's col·
leagues, however, think be
ma7 fare better if the
praeot inquiry results in
Ieilalation ~bing wider the
doorl ol ~ bank
supervisory agencies for
GAO'• auditors.
While no one believes
there is any widespread
weakness in the U.S. bank·
ing aystem. recent bank
failurel have call:led con-
gressional concern.
A~ witnen OD
loan from GAO tieat.lfied that
from tbe eetablilbmnt of
the pa:effllt 1ystiem tnW
1965 tbe mr banks cloM'd
by the aupervtsors were all
small. But the closina of
the San Francisco National
Bank in 1986 and the Public
Bank ol Detroit, Mich., in
1988 changed the plcttn.
The failure of the nearly
$100 mUlion PUblic Bank
was tile largest since the
18308.
For the first time 10 18
years, a GAO spoteaman
said, the watct>dog aiency
i! talkina directly t 0
Congress about w Ider
authority.
And Congress loves the
GAO.
W. County Area
Public Hearing Set
On Water Rate Hike
Public bearing has been
tel by the C&llfornia Put>bc
UtillUe1 Commission for
Tuesday, March 28. an tbe
appli~tion of S o u t h e r n
cmJfonala WM.a' Q>mp&AJ'
to UlcftlN ,.... fot """ 23.• cattmtr• IB Ill
Oranp C..ty J)Utrict.
1'be callfl I 7'1 J»atrid 18·
Navy Cadet
Makes Talks
eludes euch Orange Coast
areaa as Fount.aiD Valley,
Westminster, Santa An.a and
Seal Beach.
Under the c o m pan y ' ll
plan, general m e t e r e d
cu.ablMrs ill all five " Its taraet areas wOIM b e
charted uniform rates bas·
ed on a monthly 1ervice
char~ plus the quutitf of
water used.
Rates are BOW based an
a moo&bly cb:ar&e plus the
quantity of water~ over
and above the monthly
mimmum. Ratel DOW vary
tn eacti of the company'•
fift ... .,....,
ProceecliDlll Mudl 2t w
betJ11 at 10 a.m. JD tbt sna Au Qty Ball Co1ncil
C' t mt Df Nortl NUn It.. .... caJlftn1& Public
utiJiliea ('.ioi!lps'-Es·
amlner Edmuad P, C&"1
pr 11111 &II ~
-..c-fA!l1 ~ ud be ~·
DAILY PILOT p
I •
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
Shnplkijy
~74JO
Fresh-looking fabrics
for Easter sewing
1.29 98~
ywnl
72/41" wHle .......
<m, 111• leok ,.,,._ '11 m.W ii ideal tor cir_., ..-.., .-mw•. MocWne wathoble, aecne ~. m wflite, pin4c, Of'Of199, t.quoiM, fllll'IY cmcf c:oonlift.
oetftl falMOft prints.
..,..., thfft .... ,..._. In 5 \'ins~ to
alt ee-. Yow choic. ef 11...._ fabric Otld ..._
chong• the outlootc of tfWs lhift. ~ wftf! pot.
tern for .-chinv handbog.
65~ 60~
'f'911,. t• 14 4to 12
SoNs .nd prints in uclfing t9xtUNS
Airy voilee few today'• fM11inine look. ~ poly.
.. t.,/coHon prints ll'ICltd. 'lonorelo.' 1 l 9
441 '5"' wid. . • • . • . . • . • . . . • . • • • • • • • • • •
l&Mk telftw94 a.gv.....i Plu. of Polyftotic:9 rayon/
cdtoA. s.o.t.,... printt. 3.5/36 ... wt.,.. 98 (
••• ..... ""' aolitk ..,. creow r..ihtant. WMt., :~~~·.~~~~'. ~~ ~:~ ...... 98c
c..e p__,..,,.... of,.,.,,.,. Trioc_,.. for eoty-cot•
....... Uttt. .... INnifll. ~.4r --1. 98
... ,_,,, .......... MtleM ~ ......... ,.,
...., ...... , ... ........,, SlpjMrt •IHI •II , .. , ....._ .....
COSTA MESA
.(Harbor Shoppin9 Center J
. ...
U8EVOUR
EN NEV
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
TODAY I
I
Easter bound
fashions for
young girls!
.
A. o.l'ica+efy cofhlft laced cf""' Ml' ro,. ....,._ ........
Populor A-•M shopiflg ond NW tr""'f)et,,..... -. ...
"'"' fa.hi~ "•"'· ,...,., ........ to "· $ 8
I . Sprlnty CMt dr .. of abp, freen-looking
Dacron• poly•ster ond cotton 'foil.. •uffle
trimmed ileeves ond neck. Choow blue or lime.
7to u.
C. l'tald chcmMr hot MIOCked ~ -.
puff.cf sl"v"-Eo1y-care Dacron• poly crinkle
aepe. Oro1199 ond blue. 4 to 6x..
D. laby ....... Hore Ir°"' hig6t.yohd bodice.
~ J,...,_, contnrmno C9ltor a.cf Olffa. Pinlc or ,..now print. 3 to 6x..
f . Otle piece drew wffh ,.,_ look of ~
wporotul forne,. polyeter doutM kllit ...,..
kKe ....... ~ ~. 8 to u.
I • • Practical and wnotil•-
girls' rtyloft dreu glowtl
Shlny ........ .. pert.ct••--· .
Corol mna «• ...,.. ore wetch
nylon-for pert.d fft olwoytl Whf ..
only. One lia fits 3 to 6«1 one flta
7 to 14. o.corotlvw Wl'ftf ltiltls. $1
ShMy ,. .. ,,... .. ft u ..
c*""'td C9lon. Tlllllcncl ....... ~ venlble lhoufdw .._.. ___ llt
-pick yovr kmiritel
1.98·
HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
( Huntinfton Center)
.J
J8 DAJl.Y '1LOT
WON ALL 74 -At left, Exchange Oub President
Keith Olark is accepting plaque from Jim Perry
of SCATS. The team i.s hosting 1968 National AAU
Senior Championships thia April in Long Beach.
CdM Exchange Club
Gets Member Plaque
James Perry, vice pres!·
dent of the S o u t b e r n
California Aero Team. a
hlgbly trained w o m e n ' a
As World
Starves, U.S.
Gets Heavy
WhJle half the world ls
starving, 30 percent of the
American population has a
weight problem.
Because some drug• com-
monly p r e a c r i b e d for
weight reduction can have
dangerous aide effecta, the
management of overweight
patlenta was atreaaed by
Dr. Donald W. Petit, USC
clinkal professor of medi·
cine, at a symposium at the
Statler Hilton.
Some aide effecta, be
warned, may involve the
cardiovascular. cutrointea-
tlnal. 1 en l t <>-urinary and
central nervoua systems if
the drugs are used indla-
crim lnately.
Lack of physical activity
appears to be the underly·
ing caUM ~ obeaty in a
majority of ca.set, accord-
ing to Herbert A. DeVrlet,
USC profeucr ~ pbyliw
educatioa.
"For tbOM who ll"t 10 to
30 percent abov• pndict.ed
normal wetaht, a CCJ1Dbln•
tJon of diet and nerd.le II
probably the opUmal pro-
cedure," be aaJd.
College Choir
Includes Me8ans
Two students from Cotta
Mesa now a tt e n d 1 n I
Westminster OoUece. ID Salt
Lake City, Utah, will be
me mben ol ttle colle19'1 80-
voice Concert Choir on its
eight-day toor th r o u g b
:-.levada and Northern
California thil wffk.
The atudenta we Bob
Haines, son of Mr. and Mn.
R. o. Haines, rrn Moorovill
,\ve., Costa 1MM; and
David St'Oder, IOll cA Rev.
and Mrs. Warren G. Studer,
2449 Vassar Piace. Costa
Mesa.
gymnastic team, recently
presented Keith C 1 a r k •
president of the Corona del
Mar Exchange Club with a
plaque s i g n i f y i n g an
Anociate Membership to
SCAT.
The team has receDtly
become known throughout
the wor 1d for their gym·
na.rtk accomplishments and
training methods under the
direction of Olympic Coach
Bud Marquette. The t e a m
has entered 74 competitiona
and have WOil all 74.
Their success bas been IO
great that for the first time
in 80 years the National
AAU has awarded Its Senior
Championships to thia small
club, an event wilicb in the
past baa been the exclusive
honor f:A large lnstltutiooa
and univ-errtties.
The CIJampionshlps will
be held thia April 11, 12
and 13 at the Long Beach
Au<Mtorium and Arena.
GOP Group
Sia~ Meet
'Jbe biennial eudorllne
oonventiml ol the Orwnfe
OJunty Coordinattn1
Repablican Aasemhly (QC.
ORA) will be held Saturday,
April I .ccording to David
W. Geter. OCCRA
<Jialrman.
Meeting tn the convention
rwma of the Anaheim Bowl,
t b e endoralng convention
will consist of a series of
meetings of delegates from
local units in Ile various
pol:ltical dlstricta ol the
county.
The OCCRA encompasses
20 separate unlta in Orange
County, with a combined
membenhip d. nearly 2,000.
Each unit will be
represented at the con·
vention by four deleptM
end ,. CD 115 Utemate
delegates.
The conventi<n will con-
vene at 9 Lm. m April 15,
and 1a tcbedulect to complete an endoraemma by 4 p.m.
at 1bat day. Proceedints are
open to the public.
Motherless Children
Get Offers of Help
THB PENNEY STORY
Why make
such a big
deal out of
quality?
I asked a Penney 1tot'e
manager the question once
and when be finally de-
cided I was serious, he
said, "If I could me only
ooe word to deteribe the
phcnomenoo of Penney'e,
I'd pick the word, t[Nlit1.
"Mr. Penney baa at-
W'IJ1 bcm • l••ahe on the
subject," he contin•ed.
"They say the only thing
that still makes Mr. Pen-
ney angry ii when tomc-
one suggam we compro-
mite Penney quality to
mMe a lower price..
Save $20 to '60 on Fashion Manor
deluxe coil-on-coil
mattress or box spring!
LUXURIOUS COIL~N-COIL BEDDING
~
1674 coils in the fvl1 sin set ••• 2':P..,., Edg.' side ~fer tt.
fiemwt comfort MWI Mufti.nMdle qoillecl to 14* polyuretftaM fOGlft ,,,..
built bonMrs. 1 ~" polyurethane fomt lnsvlatioft on top and bottom of
mattreu. Plastic corner gvards on l»ox iprinoa. Rayon damask ticking in
W.,lbeige. Enioy trUI comfort at bit tcmngsl •
Reg. s75.._.e.
NOWS
' ..,
:~=.::-REG. *289NOw 1129 .•
NEWPORT BEACH
(fashion 111.nd)
. • . .
'
~ Bqene IL Wincbester (left) is acc=eptin Cd6cllte of Commeadatioa from Major
William G. Tbn1h. ·Base exchange officer since
Ju.ne, 1983, Cot Wlncbelter is now oa lent and
baa ~ ~"~ PY Cagt. ElUene Glass, JQrmer-. 11 auillllft&. adlance officer. Col Winchester wf11
be msflDid to oveneu duty.
~ ~
Spa.Ce Spec~lars
Delighting Residents
VAN DZ NBERG Ma
rollCB BASE, Calli. (AP)
-ap.ce ~of
~takinc deliaa ID d
beauty a r • occuionally
lleli.Clltiml and a w I n C
rettdenta ol Eastern and
Westen! states.
On the bTotld canvu of
the momm, or evening sky,
miles·looC plumes of put.el
smoke appe.M" as if by
magic -zigzagging, 1-ping
and spiraling in psyehedellc
splendor.
OccauM>nally there are
bursts ol green. ttd or blue
light that danle behokitra
up to hundreds oi miles
from rocket test centers
here and at Cape Kennedy.
Fla. . .
Missile men cafl the«e
displays of spatial lireword.s
"twilight phenomena."
COME TWlCE
The kinl-&17.a pyrotechnics
come at dawn.or dagk, when
the sun is below the horizon
aod ln the right position for
its ~ to be b e n l earth by panicles in
the nhaalt cl a juat ·laUftCb·
ed miulle or 11*-'e ~er.
Rockets flttd f t o m
Vandnberc • the centnl
Califlm1a cout h a v e
created edllMt tralk Men
as far north ~ Oregon and
as far east as Utah. Some
Cape Kennedy rockets have
been •Potted ftom pointa
along the ~· Jower East
Coast.
The weird ieometry ol the
12 Foreign
Students at
CdM High
Twelvt foreign studentJ
including four AFS student~
are attending Corona del
Mar High School t b i s
semester.
The four ArMrican f-~
Service Students are Zeerlat
Aman o( India, F r a n k
Gregory of South Africa.
Victor Gattini or Chile and
Enrique de Mestral o f
Panguay.
Other foreign studenl~ are
Ingrid Skovdal from Den·
marlt, who la Jiving with
Debby Bell. daughter of Mr.
Joeeph Bell, 411 Begonia.
Corona del Mar and Peter
Goodall, ton ol Mrs. M.
Goodall, 1671 0 r ch a rd
Drive, SanU Ana HeigtQ.
who has lived in Australia,
France, Eqlaod and Gbana
before JDftlnr .. the Uu.ed
States. ~
z1ezai tran. ii o. to h!P·
speed erou·wlndl u tt.
17,5001llUel u boor rocbta streak $.rouit> ·tM th.in aJr
at the tdCe ol .,.ce. Up
tbere -40 miles er hiaher
-air moliecules are 10 teal·
tered they cm be bJon at
speedJ ol 300 m.p.11. without
bumpU., ioto each other ~d
siowint down.
WINDS TWIST
nae. thin, shifting wi.ndJ
twist and twirl the exhaust
smoke into formations in·
credible to thOM unfamiliar
with the whims of upper
atmosphere turbulence.
The pastel colors oL the
smoke trails and the oc-
casional prismatic flares of
rainbow hues are credited
to pacticles oJ metals and
frozen vapor. in ~ .gases
ejected at the rocket's fuel
bUTM.
In the near-varuum at
200.000 feet theee bot jlases
expand swiftly over great
distances, at rat•s im·
possible in the lown-at·
mosphere. They a Is o
fluoresce -the procns
which yields the many col·
Of'S oC aeon lighta -OJI
a pant tcale. producifte ooh•
and ~ from onlooken on
tbe O"OUDd.
TM brtpter dilpl1y1 ap-
paru&ly ar-in.rated by
Minuteman missiles, which
have a significant amount
or metallic particles In their
soli4 fuel.
The directiOft of t h e
launcll -ml.Hiles from here
usually are fired w ~ s t
toward a tarpt are~ near
Kwajalefo Waod.,f'"' a" d
sate-llites are aimed south
into polar o r b i I
determines the length or the
exhaust trail visible in the
sky.
VJJ•:WER'S ANGLF.
The angle of thf' viewPr
abo pl~s a role. Observers
looking "up the tailpipe" of
a rocket fired west are like-
ly to see a brighter but
smaller clood than those
who watch the same launch
Crom points north or south
ol the base.
AD >Jr Force spokesman
says the maoueverability of.
recently developed missiles
is not responsible for the
wild zigzagging apparent in
some exhaust trails.
"MluiJes do make ad·
justments in theiT coorse,"
he says, "but these are not
sharp ~gh to cause the
crazy patterns sometimes
feel' ln ttie sky. Our scien·
tbts tell us the truly IPtC·
{Jc.uJ.ar patterns are cauSed
by winds."
A~Seeking
Volunteers
Three alt..,_, )larie E.,
Marie A. _.. Moakp•
Valleca~ came tmm
Cancaa. ~eoesue'8 . wilb
their ~r J)r. '& • 'the Oranie C • u n t y Vallecalle. U' 'Bay P'Tonl,
6 a 1 b 0 a 1 1 1 a n d . 0 r . Branch of the American CaDHr Society today illued V a I le c a I le ill a Ha arst call tw tOlllMHn neur<>pt>~ioloebt who is for the April C a a c e r v~ • 1 Crusade. Htar1 r o m The ewe ... te support ~ _. ~ ~ t>e S'oeietr• cmtinuinc ~ Alf_.. ftoln • Sli .. Phlei gram.a of l"tteaJ'th, educa-
Br.,U, .,.. .a. Coroea de tlon."'ud ff111ce to cancer Mar_... .. Cbll .. JDllUr. paUeot.t. It alllo represen!A
Marie ii a meu.tir. ol ate the major effort lo place
....., Jot UftdlrttaDdiq JJ(e-s a v i 12 g lt1fonnatton Preer•. She -. '_.. a hen.It t9ncer into rttry wMll Mn. Ml~ ,.._, local home.
• VWa ~ Nuptrt Typlnt, telephonlnJ and
-
DAIL y PllOT JI
I'
A~I Penney Stor~s Open Every Night Monday Through Satu~ay
. ,
THRU1 .. SATUR'DAY ONLY
I • ..
Save 40.95 on our . ,
Pe.nncrest sewing machines in
your choice of decorator cabinets!
'MHit•ne-"' 1tyle, weltwtv_,.
'ht!W. M..t.nl' ttyle, weh•vtv•~"
kMf ·IN Mlill'l 1 ~·
. ~
U-VDUA
EN NEY
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
TD DAVI
24 insertible cam zig-zag
• Mwl straight, zig-109, forward and reverse, with Ofte
or two needlM
• Push button for iMtont ,...,..... MWi"9
• Simple dial for preciM stitcft lengtt, control
• Prctfessional blind stitch IM"'"'4ng
• Automatic bobbi1t winder
• New serpentine stitch-gives elastic stitching for stretch
fabrics and jeF'ey
14 built-in cam zig-zag
Reg.169.95
NOW$129
• .,_. lfrOivht, zio zag, decorotiv• 1tltchft, fot'WC!f'd oftd
~ e hflt·in decorotiv. ct..lgn MlectOf
• lvlh-ln buttonkolef
• Profettionol bl 1 nd lfltch htfn"'"'9
• A111on1otlc bobbift ....._
Reg.139.95
$
NOW
' •
• • •• f
.._.. collating are amortt the
'Dill )lilt fGn1ll .._... typetofwortaYallaMlfor ____________ ....., __ .._ __ _. __ ~~~~------~----------------------~----~------~~----~~------------------
11 -... un.. -. ~ a.. w11aua1 to aa1.1t 1a the ... uaMtect stMll ... _Cancer Ciu.iie .• a.. .. NEWPORT BEACH
· (Fad.ion Island)
HUNTINGTON BEACH
( Huntin9ton Center} Ne•.U. Mexico. wt6 tlM "1unteera IN allO needed ...... wbo 891 ii ea.ita ti aal1l dty cbalnna II
....._ 111 u. Md • rur·• the retldntia1 ~· Ir , 9 I ill ..... mid'._ Pr n,u..._ .ii•elit.iill'_,,,p----~~-..--..... ---~------------------------------------------...-.:-.
_. ,_ tt 11 wry lilla1 ll't _.... • tall .. ACI ""'-* ... -to ..... to on.a. Cowlty Btucb It
... -. .. h. .. .. •
'
J % DAJL V '1LOT Monday, MMdl lS, 1%8
66 Yacht• Entered Weekend ·Yacht Rate Re8idts
Newsbo y Takes '66' Opener.
By NEAL BECKNER
Balboa Yacht C I u b ' s
popular "e&'' Hries o r
offshore ocean races got oU
to a good at.art Saturday
with 66 boat! (a ppropriately
enouib) turning out for the
13\la mile Drilling Islands
race, the first of seven
<1cheduled for !tie l 9 6 8
season
The neet competed lD five
classes: Ocean Racing "A".
"B", "C". "D" and Midget
~an Racing. the last
group having the largest
turnout Wlth 25 a c t u a I
starters.
Points are awan1ed for
.!~ "Prepare f 01
School of Business
the future •••
Todau!"
e Secreteriel
~ v~
• Me<ficel
'"sure"<•
• looH .. pi"9
• Oe"tel
Aui1tin9 ABC SHORTHAND
W1DD1NG IANDS
Foor ... , For ..
by
ART CARVED
A. .. ·""""-""· .......... • L ' • el At"9rft4 ......................
pa..e1Mt.W•Y96• . .,.....,,,....._.... ...... ...,,...
............. A f I ... ' ............ ...... ....................
Ml ..w. ~......,"' Mlllll• ...... -··
ALL 1N PltlQOUS
14K GOU>
OfilOI tr Af YOUlt l'IHHIY6S
PINI JIWllaY ,,.Alli_,,,
l'ULLl•TCMI
~Ir~ .. _
af()ra~
""'"'"'"* llUCH """"'9tllt Celllw ....... .... 0-. ......
Mnf'OllT llUClf
,. ...... 1 ......
~ ., '•C.t....,
REDUCED 1HllU SA1URDAYI
Give yourself
a brand new look
with a
Penney fashion perm!
UG. $21, NOW 12.50
both Class and fleet poG·
tJona and a ooo1eftant' 1
score ls figured on bis best
rive out of the teftu races
to qualify for the perpetual
troph.iies prtsented to claaa
and overall winners at tbe
end of the aeaeon.
Saturday's opening event
was sailed on smooth seu
with breezes that ranged
from "fresh" to "light and
variable" a combination
which made Jack Baillie'•
12-meter •loop Newsboy a
hard boat to catch as i.
sailed to a clean sweep of
first In C\ass "A" and
overall despite his very high
tune handicap
Second overaJJ and winner
of Class "C'' was Mike
Hirsch sailing the Jensen
Marine C-Orp's newest "hot· WINNER START -Ocean Ricing "A,. boata 1tart
rod". the CaJ.2.JO. Third first race of BYC'1 "86,. Series as Bob Grant'• overall in the fleet and se· cond in Class "A" was Bob Columbia 50 aloop Robon.m (No. 7000, foretrOQDd)
Grant with his brand new leads Jack Baillie'• .W.9'py at start. Newlboy wu
Columbia-SO sloop Robon III the winner with Robon m in leCODd place.
Now open and serving
COSTA MESA/ NEWPORT BEACH
which was Launched in --------------------1 Newport a few weeks ago
and sailed her flrst race
only last week-end. I
Overall and Class winners
are as follows :
lloellfte Ad N...,.,, Aoelt Jo
U S1•l1S1 D•ILLfNe ISL.ANDS
UCI
OVEltALL: 1, N......,..,, Jeck lelllie,
llYC; 2. voi.nte. Miiie Hlrt<ll. llYC! .t. llloboll Ill. 111*'1 Grent, NHYC.
O.R. CLASS A -I> tntrln: I. Nr#SDO'f, .i.e1t llelllie, llYC1 2 111-
111, Robert Gr..,I, N11YC1 l. •t letH,
~Ot Slwt lt, HHYC.
0 It. CLASS II -f tftlrlet: I.
Mel•. Oan AYrtl Jr. HHYC1 '· Meurlct. J Sullln n. LAYC. J.
E~ 11, w.,... 1•11. ecvc.
O.•. CL.ASS C -lt tnlrln: 1. 0-v. Jolln Hoolon, I CYC; t ~ldo. Jahft Plll'(ne, I YC1 l.
I~ O...let (;4-, llYC
0 . Ill CLASS D -t ontrln 1
Vol-. Mille HI"°', I YC1 1 lel.t,,..
drt, Jerry McCt.lre, LIYC1 a u,,.
Met. Didi LIMM¥, CI YC.
M O.•.I'. -2S ....,,_, I. P .... lt,
ltw1I •ll•Y & "-· llstt41, LIYC I 2. Vlve<low , 1111 VOft ICltlnSmlcl,
NHYC1 I. Tw41*1e, ,.,..,.. WMI•• I YC,
Bill Haskell
Wins Race
Mar«!la 38-31
Coast Guard Sets
Courtesy Inspection
Boat owners ...no wish to
receiw the free C o a s t
Guard Auxfliary courtesy
inspection and receive a
PYBC Lead
By U>nnelly
decal lhowin( their boat
meets all fO'Yfllmteut re-
quiremerrta are urfed to
.,.., up • the Klrt>cr
Departmmt iuest d 0 c k
betwm t a.m. md 3 p.m.
March »31.
Tbt O>urtesy Motorboat
Examination will be made
by peraonnel ol C G A
Diviaion 2.
Robert Connelly was in-Tbe CME inspection was
stalled as commodore of the requested by ttie United
Pacific Yacht and Balloon States Power Squadrooe for
Club at the recent annual it& mernbeu but ia open
dinner meeting held at the
11r1111
11111101
For you ••• courtesy •nd 11nulne frlendllneu.
f or your savin1s ••• hllhHt Hrninp In Insured safety .
B 1 oL0 :::.r;.::: 50L0 ~== a 7(] rate of 7CJ tor • ye9r.
Dr. Bill Ha..c;kell of Lido
Isle Yacht Club won the
adult Sabot series of the
Lido Isle Y,aobl Chib with
a 11C<>re of 261h points.
Newport Hamor ya c b t to the geoeral public. There
is no charge for the in-lar11 • 1 /4~ l.on111 ai-..e tht e11rre11t e1111v.I rtt• on J~111011tti cortlfica+. a«-+s i11 1t11tlti,lot .f SI ,000 •
Club. spectlon and decal Fu!Mlt ,.c•lv~ ..., tlte I Ottt .. ,.. tr-tti. ltt: aft., tt. I otti, fr-tit• al reul.,+. Besides Connelly, the fiag A CGA decal~ to Accau11h i111<1re4 •• Sll.000 ..., a ~trol a .. 11cy. Following h1:m in slan·
dings were Tom P~.
BCYC, 36; Lucille Billings,
LrYC. 51; Win B e d a 11 •
B C YC , S2 and Joe
Oolesworthy. LlYC, eoo/4.
for the year will include
Henry Erbe, vice com· theregularCoutGuardol-llJJ MIW .. OI T 80ULIVAltD, COITA ll lSA UU7. (714 ) ~···"'" ficer that the boat meetl ~Olloe: lMAltflelu :=~~~Y·~:. ~ui~~~~bJ~ •'WHERE COURTESY IS A WAY OF BUSINESS LIFEu
risaey, secretary.treasurer; forcemtmt dcsa.
Frank Cle:ndenen, fleet oap-~ COA Mel not._
tain and Don Bergman, port cita~~ ta1Me to 4.'0lno-
ply wt• 1De Jaw Wt iafOl1DI captain. tbe Miit ..,_. whit be COME IN FOR YOUR FRl!B
PERSONAL INCOME TAX GUIDEBOOK :>
For the firat tiJM since
the n.oe was t t a r t • d,
Bd>oa Yadlt club iailed to
capture tile LIYC Change
of Watdl team race, won
this year by ~ host club
with 371,2 pointa. BYC was
second with MY, rollowed
by South Shore SailJDi Club,
M~ and Voyaren Y adlt
Club, 78.
Major activity of PYBC must cl. to m e e t re-
is the annual Sail of the quimnenta. Decala a r e
Sabota, previously held in i111ued after tbe deficiency
December. but whk'h 1bil bas been remedied.
year ~ expected to be ....................... llitiiiiiiilll .. llli ........ iiiiiiiiill .. llill_. .......................... 11111 rescheduled fer a late IDID·
mer-early fall date.
Easter Island Race Set
The Easter Island Race,
March 3(}-31 will be the
opener of Long Bea<:b Yadlt
Cl11b's Catalina I s I a n d
Series for ocean Racing.
Pacific Handicap a n d
Ml<liet Ocean R a c i n g
yacbt.s.
The Easter lsLand R<H:e
la 45 oautioal miles and is
sailed In two ~. On
Saturday the fleet will r~
from U>ng &actt to Long
Point, rendezvous at White's
Cove Saturday mght and saU
back to Long Beach on Sun·
day.
The Catalina Series is open
to .all members of recognbs
ed yacht clubs wtio have
yachts in the above men-
tioned categori'e$. The re·
mainder of the races, all
with a Catalina Ialand focal
point. ~ the Around ~
Island race June 29; LoDc
Beach to Cat Harbor, Aue.
24: Cat Harbor to Lone
Beacb, Aug. 25; U>ng Beadl
«> the Isthmus, Sept. 21;
Isthmus to Long Beach,
Sept. 2'l. and the Loog Point
and Return Oct. 6.
The Hries is based Ga
the best five of ttie seven
race.s.
EXPERT WATCH REPAIR
6 DAYS ONLY AT
THIS SPECIAL PRICE
Lit_ ....... ...,.._ ,.....,_._. ,_.....,, " _ _... ...... .............. .,...., ... ........... ... . ......
• _,..... .. -4
5.95 .................... .................... ......., ......
OU1 PllST TMOUGKT ••• YOUl CONflDINCI
YOU CAN nun OUI IXPll1'S .. ................................. ,,, ... ... ........ , .............. .. .. ............... ,.. .......... ....,.,..
CHMGI n Ar YOUR PINNIY'S
PIHi JfWl&aY Dlf'AllfMBlf
'VUA•ftm
~lrClllW ...,,.
8t OI& a A N
••• .., UAC1\ ,_ ....... , ........ • ,.. Qd""'
FOR 15 YEARS BOB ·WILSON
HAI STOOD FOR PROGRESS
COSTA MllA HAI PLOURllNID
1953 1968
Are1 3.5 Sq. Mies 15.64 Sq. Miles Auestecl Valu.tion
Business License1 $12,000,000.00 $135,509,030.00
0 5,021> Dw.ren91 5,711 (1955) 21,049 lmpn>•ement Districts 0 $6,000.000:00 lndustri1I ZonirHJ 371.57 Acres (1957) I ,2n.4JS ('9ron Acljud9cl) lndustriet
lftlUrance Cl.uffic:Ation 30 320
VIII end IX IV Major Streets 0 14 Mi1es Parb 1-10 AcNS . t ,arb M.3 Acres Paved Streets 60.21 Miles 111.27 Milet Population 16.115 n,ooo S.les T11 Receipts $100,189.16 ( 1955) $1,453.371.68 S.w..-s 0 I 92.39 Miles Storm 0tlfM 0 21 Milei
Street Lights 990 (1958) 4.379
T reffte SiCJMh 0 32
Voiers S,3'5 25,000
All of this ;ust didn't happen -it wot planned
''TRUST IXPIRllNCI''
RE-El.ECT ROl~T M •. "80~" wiLSON
INCUMIENr • APRIL '· 19'1
• M.yer ., c..... ....... '••~ .
• ,.,.,.., c..ta Met. ,..._. eomm-.. ~
• Mei1M ef ONft'te ~ LM9UI .I at;.
• Pllt Y~. Am1ric... ~
• Aau•aa:e CWnz:o 0..,. C.... UiM
• 0.hw M.a. tlf C... ._.. N 11•1•• ~ e Ow.w' .J "The A .... M...•
• ,, ... .,. ef Welhrft ~""f Alaea.tt.
\ • \
4
11A ANDDSON, ldlte-r
'Yo, Ho, Ho' .
Bargains
T reaswred
"Yo, 'Ho, Ho and a BoWe of Rum·mage" ls the tune
beln1 aun1 by Coata Meea Women's Club members u
they 1atber, sort and price new and used articles for
their sale, to be conducted at 10 a.m. Friday, March 29, in tbe clubbOUle.
In bepint with tbe na~l theme which wu •
ltded for the year, the annual event will have the air
of a treasure hunt, with &aletnfoinell dreaed 11 pirates.
Under the w&J• and means cb&.lrmanship of Mrs.
Ralph Littlefield, members have collected and made
uJe items a11 year,''° that the benefit could be billed
as "bi11er and better dl• enr."
B.argain prices ltlrt at a penny, and all proceeds
will support the dub'• majer philanthropies, •uch u
teachine and nursing ecbolarshipe, the Girl.a Club and
the Boys Club.
. ·-....... ~ -
•
Serving oo Mrs. IJtUelield's committee are the
.Mimi. Katberine Wadsworth, John Miller, Bess John·
IOJI. Robert Burke, Qiet McCarty, Alvin Pinkley, John BooDut, Jim Curran, Raymond Russell, William Ker·
mOd'e, Mwin Mutuno, William Goodwin, Paul Snyder,
Ji1orence Wildermuth, J. P. Puffinbarger, Frank Hruza, George Pupley, Uoyd Robinson , Lew Dunning and
Dan Mcc.ty.
PIRATE'S BOOTY -Overjoyed with their "raids'' of attics,
closets and basements are Mrs. George R. Wri~t (left) and
Mrs. Jim Curran, who apparently are mappmg out new
ventures to ''pirate" booty for the Costa Mesa Women's
Club Rummage Sale, to take place Friday, March 29, in the
clubhouse. Bargains galore are promised thrifty shoppers.
Cinderella Provisionals Learn the 'Bear Fads'
Formally introduced to CROCO the bear, mucot
of Children'• HOleltaJ of Orange County are Cin-
derella Guild provisionals Oeft to f'ilbt). the Mmes.
Harvey Be.fltt, Ralph Gray and James J. Watton. n.e,. plu the Mmes. John Koch. Laurence Ia.
Jamel N. Ewart Jr. and Ralph Moraan were wel·
corned to th.ii rank by guild members during a
luncheon. 'Ibe euild la one of 11 1UPport groups
of tbe botpital.
Ball Plans
Rolling
Launching a series of activities for 1968
National Charity League debu :3ntes will be
the formal announcement of who has been
selected. Introductions will be made during
the traditional Medallion Tea in May.
Prior to arranging the tea, numerous be·
hind-the-scenes planning has taken place,
with the first being the selection of the ball
chairman.
Mrs. John C. Londelius has accepted these
duties and announced the annual ball again
will be pre6ented in November.
Serving on her comnUttee will be the
Mmes. Kenneth S. Ross, accessories: James
B. Fredericks, club arrangements; Chester F.
Salisbury. debutantes: Jerome Helperin. deb-
utante fathers; John H. Hiestand. decorations,
and Robert H. Stra1tt1f. escorts and stags.
Others serving as chairmen are the Mmes.
Paul J Williams and John B. Colby, invita·
lions; Woods Barneson. master of ceremon-
ies. presentor and floor committee: John
Farrer. music: Wahlers Olander, photogra-
phy; Allen T. Campbell, pubhcity: Richard C.
Rawlings, secretary: William HaskeU, treas·
urer and reservations, and Robert J. Hayes,
social.
The ball, sponsored by the Newport Chap·
fer of NCL. ts given as a benefit for the
group's philanthropies -the major one is
the John Tracy Clinic for hard·of-hcaring and
deaf preschool children and their parents.
The chapter also operates at John Tracy Clin·
ic Demonstration Home.
BALL CHAIRMAN
Mrs. John C. Londelius
ith So Many Chicks to Feed,· 'How Can Dad Fly the Coop?
ANN L ANDERS ~
.... la wwlltq • a mldlH. ·Accept ................... help Jt.
We have a aon but have no problem
wltb blm. He II a sweet )'Otlnllter
and well behaved. I rarelJ bate to
ralM~m voJce at the M,, but I am lhrletlill at tbe prl.
She 1t =aware of m1 hatred aDd J.a ot me. P'rlUl7, r
am tenilJed of me, too. Cb you
help nM Wort tomethint • ~ble
happemt -COUNTOOWN MOTHER
DE.All MOTHER: v .. U'e ,,.._
-..... ,.. ~ fer 11• .. e elte -.. .... .,._. dlM. Peru,,.
It · lau to do wilh yotr basbaad or
JHl' feeUngs toward your o"n
~er.
Yoa are a very ~ck womu. Ask
,_, pby1iclan ~ recommend a
1Qdalatrl1t at oace. Jn fact, an him
,.-, tte0m"1end two p1ycbJalrl1ta. A
~ wlM h11 beea the object of
-mother'• lntease hatred for four r;:' In all probabflJty oeecla help,
DEAR ANN LANDERS: M y
lliuband'a mother ls a great looking
Ml. hM a neat flCure and 11 oaJy a·~1w1 o~r than I am. Eun.let
• l could easily pus ror alJtera. a. lw tau1bln11J descrlbed ha hus-Mlid (number three and 11 years till' MDJor) u "dead from the neck both .. , ....
Eunice !\as a sood job tn tbt office •
of a warehouse and ill VM"'f popular
with rH~ryone In fact. shr 1s too
popular This is the problem lier
hu~band phoned us twice last week
and again tonight looking for her.
MY husband said to me "U Mom
is· using us as an alibi she should
tip us off " r looked at him in amazl'·
mrnt and said. "l wouldn 't play that
kind 11f a gamr. even for your
mother·•
We got into an argument about
•·Joyalty" and he Insists hJs mother
is an unusually vital woman. that
her husband a unq~~tionably Im·
potent and there I.I nothing Immoral
about ''problctlng" h e r so sht> c a n
have a decent life
May we bear from you 7 -STILL
FIGHTING
DEAR STILL1 nil II a dtcnt
lie~ .....,, I dn't 1Mly It. If your
husband wanh to "protect'' EunJct,
that's up to him, but you are under
no oblitatlon to do 110. The next Ume
Eunlct't husband caJls, say, ''Jatt
a mJaute." tbtn band the plaone Ct
your ho1band.
Whal awaits you on the other al~
or the marriage veil? How can you
be sure your marriage will workt
Read Ann Landers' booklet ••Mafriao
-What to Expect." Send your requetl
to Ann Landers in care of ~
newspaper enclosing SO cents in coli
and a long. stainped, self . ..adlfrfll:Mlm
envelope.
Ann Landen will be &lad to
you with your problems. Send tb
to her in care ol the DAJLY P
enclosing a M)f~. sta
envelope.
' • t
...... lllPdl ZS. lM
Cash Regilfers Will Ring Sa/es For Charities
Newport Beach Chlpter of Kiwi Club ii IPOlllOrlnJ lfn. Robert W. Howlrd, 1908 Deborah Lane, New·
a aarac• Ill• wtt11 ~ bat a e1r fOtnr tor port Bach, wm be a. ..utac for Use 111e Sitar·
the rilbt price. Wortmc with chairmlll Jln. II. J. day, Mlrcb 30, from t a.m. to 5 p.m. Tbt public 11
Ormerod are (left to npt) the Mmes. Fred Betta, invited and former American Aliilne stewardetla
George Simor and Wllllam Wiibon. The home of are lnYited to cuitact Kra. Don 1'. Bonrd, 646-WS,
regardtne memben:hlp.
Volunteer
Notes
MANY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
After IW'Veyinl needs for volunteers, the
Volunteer Bureau bu discovered many varied
openinis.
A Co9ta Mesa hospital has requested helpers
in the library and u receptionists and asks stu-
dent3 to help with 1t1peecb therapy for retar~
children.
In other capadUea, a CosU Mesa club for glirls
has openings !or tnltnlctors in domeatic akllls,
dance, drama, tpe>rtl, uu and~ and penonal
groomJnf, while the <>ranee Coo.my Council of
Boy SoouU urgently need• typi.U and clerical help.
Thole wanUng to offer 1enicea are asked to
call the bureau at 642-0983 weekdays between 9
a.m. and noon.
VB IS A OOMMUNlI'Y CHEST UNITED FUND AGENCY
Boat Fans
Beckoned
If you are a boatlnt en-
thu&Ulst, there's a O'O\lp
walling for you to don your
water togs and join them.
The Coast Guard Aux-
illary and FloUUa 2IS invite•
any boatinc fan to join them
next Suoday, March 31, in
the Bayside Inn, Newport
Bea<:h.
Breakfast will begin at
11:30 wtth a buaineu meetina
at the Newport Harbor
D e p artment aftenrardl.
Cbart rHdinl and chart
correct.loo will be t h e
meeting topics.
Anyone wi1hln1 further in-
formation may call Leiter
Brown at 527-3M5.
JEWELRY
ESTATE SALE
WEINERT.CLARK Fine Jewels. Fashion Island, has been appointed by
the attorneys to dispose of e large estate of jewels to satisfy the division
by the heirs.
P1rti1I Inventory:
A wide pl.tinum end dt.mond br1c:elet containinq ~5 marquise
diamonds weighinq 5. 75 carats: 6 half ·moon weighing 3.00 carats; 120
baquettes weiqhin 9 .00 carats; '408 round diamonds we ighing I 7 .00 car-
llh: total -H.75 carats of fine diamonds.
A pl.tinum and di1rnond dip brooch containinq 50 marquise
diamonds weighing 3.00 carats: 38 tapered baguettes weighing 2.00
carets; 194 round diamonds weighing 8.00 corats. Total weight, 13.00
carets of beautiful diamonds.
A pl1tinum and di1rnond rift9 containing a center diamond weigh-
ing 7 .SO carats old f oshioned cut but absolutely beauti ful.
A pl1tinum s.pphire ond diamond ring. Cushion-cut corn-flower
blue sapphire weighing approximately 2.93 carots.
An emerald and di1mond platinum ring. Emerald of fine color
weighing opproximotely 3.38 care ts.
A diamond and yeftow...gold ring. Tiff any setting with diamond
weiqhing approximately .H caret. very slightly imperfect.
In Year 2000
By PATlllCIA lllCOIUOat
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
bocll9 .... Illa day
didn't IMIW 971biow1 wbu
the ...,. "' .. IUDOI' Nldl
"My ... don't JOU t!Unt
tt'• time ,.,. Md «lie beJr
CJO yoar...., md lep cut?''
1be boalt • • r v Ill t scrattbed IMr' bud. emack-
ed .. llpe Md nodded her
cra.ctum ''7•"
The l8d7 ,... bllck to
her ---md the boale aen..t ...t to IMI pbooe.
Tbe aerftlll d1a1ed the fami· 11 vetmnart.D, matinC an
appoiatmmt for tt.e trim· mirll ol arms and Jep.
To lllldlntand auch a
IC*llt, ...... fll1nis yoa
~ know. 'lbe year is
2000 or befood. 1be house
..-vant II a d1imp -a
'lffrJ ipedal kk>d of Simian,
bonv•.
Thia OM belongs to a
11rain Untaed with aince
1988 by bumanl expert in
molec'Ullr bioloJY. The
atraln'1 tene• have been
programmed in a way to tan bebavior beyond tree-
nrinlinl and capable of
bouN-clelllinC.
1b1a yelJ' 2000 1 t all will
come 4rue, uys Arthur C. a.u, ~fiction
wk IDd C04utbor ol
"DI: A Spece Ody11e7."
He anduMed from Kine'• eoa.,., London, i.m. rn
<Aybl IDd CCMU1hored the
JCript f.or tbe new MGM
movie bued oo bis ''2001"
book.
Aboard the ~ LarH. prior to llilinc to Hoaaldu
•n4 the tnditional AIOba welcome are Mr. and
Mn. Stan Gortnec of Costa Mesa. Gorinac ii the
retired JDlllaler of tbe Mesa Verde Country Club.
Sears
Over 20 Sizes to Give You
Perfect Fit at Thigh,
Knee, Calf, Ankle
' '
. ~ .. NttJI
A di1mond ond pletinum large dome ring with one round die·
mond weighinq I .20 carats ond I 8 round diamonds weighin<J approxi·
motely 2.1 S carats.
A di1mond end white gold teffh rt'") containin<J 3 diamonds
weighing approximately .75 carat.
Just Arrived! New Spring Shades
Proportloned•Flt Nylons
A cli.mond end pletinum rin9 conteininq a center stone weigh·
in9 approximately l.b4 carets of fine color, slightfy imP9rfed.
A fascinating and unusuol opal nec&c. of 14K yellow gold, with
rubys & diamonds.
A ct.lnty end exquisihl di~ end pl.tinum watch.
Pfus many other interestin<J Jewelry V elues.
• Cling-alon• Sean evcluaive stretcll nylons
• Mesh knit with reinforced heel
• Regular knit with nude heel
'•
• Proportioned t.o fit in length and width
r ... "7~
MRS. HUGH L. LOGAN JR.
Selects Tustin Home
J
Weddings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
To avoid dhappointment, prospective
brides are ftminded to have their wedding
atom with black and white gl06sy photo-
graphs to the DAILY Pll.,OT Society Depart-
ment prior to or within one week after the
wedding.
For emgagement announcements It is
suggested that the story, also accompanied
with a black~~ whit.e glossy picture, be
submitted ear"'. U the betrothal announce-
ment and wedding date are six weeks or le5s
apart, only the wedding photo will be ac·
cepted.
To help fill requirement.!J on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are avail-
able in .iJ ot the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by Social
Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466.
Educating Consumers
Goal of New Course
Rental vs purchase in
housing, the consumer as
"fall guy," family money
management and t h e
supermarket "run" will be
incll.lded in a 10-week course
to be offered by Mrr.
Dorothy Wenck, co u n t y
home advisor.
Newlywed Hugh Logans
Honeymoon in Bay Area
The classea will begin at
7 p.m. Wednesday, March
'l:l, on the UCI campus, and
continue at the same time
on successive Wednesdays.
Entitled The Consumer
and the Marketplace, the
course also will include in·
struction on shopping for
credit, saving on insurance,
and shopping for clothes,
appliances and furniture.
Last year, the advisor ad-
dressed more than 9,000
people in 18 short courses
and numerous one-day con-
ferences.
Home in Tustin following
a San Francisco honeymoon
are Hugh L. Logan Jr. of
Tustin and his bride, Inger
Olsen of Costa Mesa who
exchanged vows and rines
last Saturday before the
Rev. Dr. Charles H. Dieren-
fteld in St. A n d r e w • s
P r e 1 b y t erian Church,
'Shapewalke,,.' •••
The Custom-fit
Pantie Girdle/
Vassarette fashloM the
'Shapewafke,.. ••• to fit yau
up and down as well as
around! In sheer t.ycr ..
tpiindex with araduated con·
trol piinefs and stretchy face
cuffs. You're right In step In
• 'Shapewalkere• -
. •fl in 1itH S·liA·L
Newport Beach.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Karl Olsen of
Anaheim, was given in mar-
riage by her father. She
wore an A-line floor length
gown of satin, featuring
pearl and lace trim on her
sleeves and neckline. The
lace was repeated in ap-
pliques down the front of
her skirt.
Caught to a pearl double
crown was her illusion veil
and she carried a cascade
of yellow roses and baby's
breath.
Attending her as matron
of honor was her sister,
Mrs. Finn Ole Olsen, while
maid of honor was Miss
Maris-Lynne Ward. Both
wore floor length yellow
frocks, bordered with daisy
trim. Tbetr headpieces were
made of daisies, which were
also tied with baby'a breath
for the!r bouquets.
The bridegroom, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh L.
Logan of Arlington, Va.,
asked the bride's brother-in-
Betrothal
News Told
The 50th wedding an-
n iv er s a r y of her
grandparents was selected
for the announcement date
of the engagement of
Michele Carriveau a n d
Julien E. Lecrivain.
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Car-
riveau of Huntington Beacb
made the announcement at
a celebration honoring JU.
and Mrs. A. E . Arney of
Orange.
Miss Carriveau ii a
graduate of South High
School, Torraice, and at.
tended Orange C o a a t
College and California State
College at Long Beach.
Her flance, aon of Mr.
and Mn. Julien E. Lecri-
vain of Huntington Beach,
ia a graduate of Htmtingto11
Beach High School, OOC and
the Univermty of Southern
California.
The couple plan to be
married May 11 in St. Fran-
cia of A.ssis1 Catholic
Chirch. Hantiniton Beacb.
ELECTB8LYSIS
...............
....... Ir_.. ..
--... o..i..ctt-. ............,_tfl.4.
....... c.,..,n.
.......,e....twi-....., s..e.
Jaw Finn Olsen to be his
best man. Her brother,
Michael Olsen was the ring
bearer, and serving as
ushers were W e s I e y
Masenten, Wayne Bartley,
and John Olsen, another
brother.
Following the ceremony
was a buffet dinner in the
Laguna Hotel.
The bride a t t e n d e d
elementary and part of high
school in Copenhagen, Den-
mark, waa graduated from
Santa Ynez High School,
California, received her BA
from • the University of
California, Santa Barbara
and now is working for her
MA in German literature
at UCI.
Her husband received his
education in A r l i n g t o n ,
earned his BS from Cornell
University where he af-
filiated with Theta Chi, bis
MS trom the University of
Pennsylvania and now is
working towards a PhD in
engineering at UCI where
he taught engineering last
ye~.
MASTER
CHAR&E
'l'hrough this mediwn plus
newspaper columns a n d
rafilo, Mrs. Wenck ac-
complishes one principal
mission, educating the con-
sumer.
Shoppers
'Welcome'
To Rummage
Browsers aoo &hoppers
are welcome to attend the
annual rummage s a I e
sponsored by Women of the
Moose Chapter 1158, Costa
Mesa, Friday and Saturday,
March 29-30, at Moose
Home, 435 E. 17ttl St., Costa
Mesa.
In c h a r g e of ar-
rangements is the friendship
committee under ttie direc·
tion of Mrs. Bill Kin·gsbury.
Doors will be open from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. ~ch day.
INSTRUCTOR
Mrs. Dorothy Wenck
Garden Club
The first Tuesday at 10
a.m. is the time set aside
for members of Harbor
Garden Club to meet. Loca-
tion may be obtained by
calling Mrs. Br ad I e y
Sohw arz, 646-6542.
BUY NOW, SEW NOW
FOR EASTER I.
SANFORIZED COMBED COTTON
Sun Valley Plaids
zinty, w•1hf•1t colora on gingh•m
REG. 89c to 98c yd. value
35" /36" widths
Little lronfnt
gu•r. wash•blt
CrHae r"l•t•nt cotton
PRINTED LAWN
Cotton flocked
DOTIED SWISS
Combed cotton
SHEER "de swa" PRINTS
89dvo.
89dvo.
98¢vo.
c,.... ,..lstant
WHISPER COTTONS
Wllh•bfe cotton
LACE "la fleur " PRINTS
$J29vo.
$)49vo.
$]18vo. Cotton '1aelg1QM11
SCREEN PRINTS
U'' /45" widths guar. wllh•blt
BANI(.
AMERICA RD
HONER '1.AZA
I mt AT llt!STOL
SANfA AMA
MJ.&Uf
HUNTINGTON CENTER
IDfNtlR AT HACH HUNTIN~TOM HACH
lt7·IOU
SOl/TH COAST f'\.AZA
IRISTOL AT SAN Dll<90
FWY~ COST A MlSA ,., .....
Mariiuana Panel Topic
, Whether marijuana abould
be legal.l.zed will be dl&cuss-
ed at the next meeting of
Las 0 l a a Toastrni&tress
Club, Huntington Beach, at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
March 'l:l, in the Mercury
Savings and Loan building.
Mrs. Gary Giles wil:l lead
a group discussion, and Mrs.
Allan Kennedy and Mrs.
CalVil\ Olcott will instruct
members and guests on the
difference between sym-
w
posiurQ pa.,nel and discussion
group.
Miu Eugenia J o n e s •
member of the Garden
Grove club, will be guest
evaluator and Mrs. Rowen
Adams will preside.
Women who would be in-
terested 1n attending the
discussion may obtain ad·
dltional information by call-
ing Mrs. Giles, 545-2671, or
Mrs. Joseph Nebelsky, 962·
4648.
....... ~
Peering f
Around 1
AMONG 14 coeds from
California St.ate College at
Long Beach initiated into
Delta Delta Dtita sorority
were Miss Patricia Dowers
and Miss Georgia RowJimd,
both o1 Huntington BeaclJ.
3-piece suits ·or dresses ••• all styled by 'the
f teader in wool knit fashions ••• now at tremen·
(/ dous savings. California eolors; sizes 8 to 20.
Dress Sll011
u um
J8 DAILY 'ILOT Monday, Mirth 25, 1961
. San Gabriel Church
Selected for Wedding
San ~1el MetMdist
oC'hurch was selected for the
wtdd1ng ol Diane Jones and
'Ray Rule.
Given in marriage by her
1tep.father, Or S N .
Kowall, the bnde 1s the
Laguna DARs
View Defense
Gunnery Sgt Wallace L.
Lippard of El Toro N.arme
Air Corp Station will d1scuss
national defense with Pa-
tience Wn gbt Chapter mem-
bers, Daughters of the
American Revolution a t
12 1~ p m Tuesday, April
2.
Dunng the meet.mg in
Hotel Laguna, the chapter's
DAR Good Citizen-of-the-
year award will b e
presented, and nominating
commJttee members will be
selected.
Hostesses will include the
Mmes. Fred C. Ross. Ernest
V. Ba c on, llte H.
Westmoreland a o d E.
Burdette Elmore. M r s .
Albin Wetbe, regent, will
preside.
dauctrter of Mn. Kowitt of
HunttnJton Beacb.
lfA111 Debbie Petersen of
Arcadla served aa auud of
bonor, and the bride asked
her aiJter1, the Misses De>
b1e and Nancy Jone.i, and
be'r COU&iJI, Miss Vickie Bull,
to be her bridesmaids.
Brenda Byrtus of West
Covina and Jeff McNeely
0( Ventura were flower &ifl
and riDI bearer.
Attending the bridegroom.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Burnell
Rule of San Gabriel. was
Gary Newruchwander of
Alhambra. best man, and
uahera were Mike Bull. the
bnde'a cousin. Cbarlea Rule,
ttte bened.lc:t'a cousm, and
Ken Kendrick.
The bride is a graduate
of San Gabriel High School
and now is attend.inc Ml
San Antonio Col.Jege where
she is a member of Alpha
Eto Rho. flying club.
The bridegroom attended
Keppel and San Gabrie.J
lhgh Schools.
Following the wedding 250
friends and relative& at-
tended the reception taking
place in the church, and
the newlyweds deputed on
a honeymoon trip.
SKIPPER·ETTE
BEAi/TY SALONS
ii
SWITCHED-ON
and SWITCH-MATCHED
wnh our instant hait coloring
W <'can twirl or ..ai all)' nikll md -in
a 8Mh -11111&dl1'0llr osa hair &o & with
S4.71
• eoloft imta.n&ly; shampoog oat lf 1ou
c:MDp J9Q.r mood f
• - -peroxide; oeeds no att.nue r
• CD'IWI sru. refre:abea dQ]J hair,
tDwW..Whafr!
COSTA MESA. CAUF. ............ IWMr't ..... ............
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
• w. "" ... ...........
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF' •
'"'....., 8NC. -.. '911llt ...... ,.....,.,.a.
ORANGE, CALIF,
IJM W C"--,.,,.,.. ma.
SANTA ANA, CAUf'.'. , ............. ,.,
T-C...... ,.,_ .,._,.
SANTA ANA, CALJ,-; • ............... .......... c..iiw ..........
MRS. RAY RULE
New Brl•
£5i1 PWWWM*
What's Doing
MARY DAY
642-U21
Horoscope ._.,
Capricorn: Enthusiasm Wasted
TUESDAY,
MARCH 26
By SYDNEY OMARB ..
• 100 ..,,_. a .u..r. A.QUdl\tl (Jaa. »Feb. BllmlDAY 1• b8"a aldDtJ
llAGn'l'W\11 (NOY. 2). 11): hrtto padli th.at seem.a to tara JDOD11, bUt 10CI lllUlt
Dee. 2l): Be qitraprEUcll 11 k e 11111 maotJ toed Be Jean to al.lo llft It. Op.
Qm Jad.. ~ eater 0 fl 111 I 1 , Slraa iD-pca1unJty ailtl duriq llP"
pktUfe sa.csy ..w.n. clipiDdinct et tboaib\. ae-comiQf IDODUla ID creat1J .. The wile mu cootroll · T a k -......, cblck tklo. It• f to nccea ii abaDce pretU,..
bis destiny . . • Altrolo17 Je .... i · T a e laQcflD&t c:reatm tbOQl)rt. Jpcn ooe G B N E a A L TE N·
pomll the way... ~·· ~~r:-of..:i! who prqcbd ~~ DENaEI: Lwm pol,itioo
ARIF.S (March 2J.·April barplft. Aecent MCUritJ. ICbeme. favorable f<lr filblq. Cycle
191. Much of wba& occun It-March bifb for PISCES, ARIES. today appeari clouded -CAPJUCOBN (Dec. Z!-Pl8CES <Ftb. TAURUS. Specla1 ward to
isi.ues are aot clear. There Ju. 11): Don't trJ to do 20): *°' approach you LIBBA: remember rwotu.
1 s bebiod-the-lei?nea ac-or aay •verythlq st once. w1t.b ideu, qum.IOC11 and tiGDI coDCel'1llAI bealUt and
Y Y cq-enthuaium la wuted problems. Beed your own tm ty. ou want to leave if f COWlH1. Means apeak up for work.
a project ..... but realize it orces are •cattved. ...... "-· .i""'t. A1J T• ...,. .,. -. .-,, -" has not been completed. Be CooceDtrate -fluilb OH •bat you u.:u..-e ..... ..,eJf..,":..:'*'n. ~ o....~
ma .. ·-e upect of~~ st a Uute. ouUidu may attempt t.o . _. • °""" • o-r '"' . --r-:..i_ ...... __ _.... ........ e -...i ..... Reailt lie DAIL.Y l'l\.OT, .. ae, TAURUS (April 20-May &uaa JOU WlD ".._ auu ~ J.,_ r--· ._. c.Mrtt ..._ .... v--.
20): Your ab1Ut7 to let,;:::'=a.lo=pop=·=~J;;:ui:;:tJ;;·=====·==TOD==.!=1'=1S==Y=O=t1R=:;:";;:· v=·:;:*';;:'=· ======:=• others know what you feel,
desue is emphasized. Fine
new contact p r o v e 1
beneficial Your bo~ and
wtShes come closer t o
reallties. Have talk with
friend.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20): Public attention comes
yolD' way. Know tbia. G"3I'd
against careleuoess. Be
sure, positive and d1rect.
1 People as.II: 11 u e 1 t j o n s .
Answer with sincerity. Then
you win.
CANCER (June 21.July
22): Travel may be
necessary. Important to
outline objectivea. S o m e
who profess to k n. o w
answers may, in fact, be
puzzled. Find out who, what,
where and why. 'Mlen pro-
~ accordingJy.
LEQ (July 23-Aog. 22):
A void e x t r a v a g a n c e .
Temptation is to coddle
yourself where finances are
concerned. Wise path sees
you counting your pennies.
Those who care are not im-
pressed by foolish spending.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): I
Don't be in too much of
a hurry. Mate, partner may
express viewpoint opposite
your own. Defer f i n a 1
decision. Wait and observe
-dilemma is due to be
solved.
LIBRA (Sepl 23-0ct. 22):
Best to slick to familiar
ground. Gain confidence.
cooperation of co-worken.
Not wise to change routine.
You are at your best today
when you write, speak about
special job.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21) : Social cont.acts im-
portant today. Your ability
to put over special proj~cts
is accented. P e r s o n a I
magnetism rating is high.
Oppoljte sex is attracted -
FINE BAKERY
YJtntlm~~~
Rich venina ctN"' filli1t9, luscious choc•t.t•
gin• ... the perfect Jeuertl 1 At
~fffl}~
Delicious welnut..,aisin filled ICM1f • . . tCM1st
it for • brHkf aat treat! He
~trU(!,(?~~
Spicy-9ood with moist chunks of •p~les
throu9hout. 6/stc
chopped 9laied fruit and nuh. . 6/47c
~~~Cde
Our special production every Fri-
day & Saturd1y! So 9ood that
once you try it, you're hooked!
Two rich chCM:olate layera with
pecan Ir coconut froating and
fillin9 • absolutely heaventy!
2.65
CENTER
673-6360
-..
. , . -
Students Invited How to Bring Home Bacon
BPW Hosts · Panel Talk •
Music Programmed
A apeclal musical treat will be oUiehcl
Harbor Area Junior high acl1ool atudents Fri-
day, Illich 29, at 10 Un. bi Orange Coast Coll• audttoriwh.
Presentina the program will be the Debut
OrcbeltN ol L<>e Angeles under the auspices of Orange County Philharmomc Sodety.
'lb1I nationally renowued orchestr. la com-
poeed of young mustcians under 25 who have
won tbe1r places through competition. Mi-
chael Ti1'oo Thomas will conduct for his third see.son.
Cooperating with the Society will be the
admillistrUlve staffs of N~Mesa Uni·
fled School Dilt:rict.
Knowtna bow to fmd and
b'*i a '°' will be tmpertut
to the future buslo e11
woman.
Both topica will be u -
plorect at the lixtb G.Dual
c.&reer1 Unlimited Satur·
day, 1'arcb 30. The pro-
sram. lpC>nforect by the
Newport Harbor Bu.alDtsl
ad Proft.taioMl .....
Clltb, wW belf.n au: JJ a.a
in the Mesa Verde CouotrJ
Club.
The conference II
dedicated to tbi late Mn.
Alma BUib, foutlidlr fl
Car.era Unllmit9d alld a
put lftlldent of t ••
Newport Harbor .. .
One • hundred ..... ~" craduatlnc atudatl I r • m
Barbor Area btt' ICbool.I
and Oraaae Cout ColliiP
l\aff ~ bwtted to u.. coa-
hrence, ~ to M1al Dowrene Halm, COllfsace
chairman.
SpeaHrs will Jn c h d •
survey, and Mn. Don
S o u t b w o r t b • pro11am
dealen.
Helping with reglJtration
will be tile Mmes. R. E.
Chandler, Dorla C r o x o n ,
Marion ~Bus and W. C.
Noller. Aaalating wJ t b
publicity 11 )tr1. J . P.
Sutherland. Secretarial staf.
fera an the Mmes. Carol
Fiaher, X. W. Gorton, and
Vergll Oaiden.
Smart Jacket
Junior Ebe/ls Study • IUchard C. .1oba1 on •.
Fashion, Art Styles
Technique bl fMb.lon amd
art will be studied by
members oi the Junior
Ebell Club of Newport
Beach, durinc AJril.
C.orrect ways to dresa and
acceasariie basic ensembles
will be demonstrated at the
club's fasblon show lun-
cheoa at 11:30 a.m. Thurs-
day, March 28, when John
Heney of Buttuma' present&
the program in the Ebell
Clubhouse.
• aaJute to the new member
and active member who
donated the higbest number
ot club hours for the year,
and • report on a children's
art show. The report wiH
be presented by Mrs. Gary
Rawlln&s, fine arts chair· KEYNOTE It
E. D. Montano man. --~~~~~~~
Long Beach Students
· manager, Orange Ooun~
youth Opportunity Center'
Santa Ana, who will dUcuas.
Employment Opportunities
ud Seeking Employment;
Pbillip C h a m b e r Ii o ,
manager of employmait.
Collins Radio Co., Newpoft
Beach, whose topic is 1be
Interview and Securing a
Job, and Elmer D. Montano
of Co6ta Mesa, personael
manager, J . C. Penney
Company, Inc., Buena Park,
whose topic is Holdinc a
Job and Advancement in the Busin~ World. Students
will be able to• queations
after the panel presentation.
Aft« IUDCb there will be
Fqr the entire month,
members and friends may
study the art techniques of
Miss Aileen Worthley wbo
bu been Hlected U artist-
of·fbe.moDth. On display in
Marinen Library will be
worts of her ttudeata, which
repruent, her artistry.
• fashion lbow from Sean Winter Wedding Told ~m:n~~~ ~-
Perry will be commentator.
Miss Worthley ii the recl· Jient ol ecbolanlllpi from '
the San Diego Academy of
Fine Arts, Otis Art lnttitute,
and the Art Centei-School.
Loa Ang... She teaches
in hlr own ltud.lo bl Cotta Mesa.
Mr and Mrs. Verlan L
Jooes of We~tchester bave
disclosed the engagement
of their daughter, Kathryn
A n o e Jones and Charles
Roger1 Lynch, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Cecil R. Lynch of Newport Beach.
The bride-elect and her li-
ance are both graduates of
Westchester High School
and are attending California
S t a t t College at Long
Beach. The artist's work is cur·
rently being shown in the
Challla GallerieJS, Lagurb
~ch, and Austin Gallery,
Monteclto.
Busineu to be conducted
at the 'Mlunday meeting
will Include presentation of
the 1988-69 slate of officers,
Fashion Duo
KATHRYN JONES
To Marry
Miss Jones is majoring in
business administration and
is affiliated with the Little
SiJters of Phi Kappa Tau
fraternity.
The benedict-to-be w i 1 l
graduate in June with a BA
in social science and is a
,.. member of Phi Kappa Tau.
The couple have planned
to marry in December.
The engagement. newl! was
revealed during a luncheon
in the home of the bride·
elect's parenta. F a m i I y
members and close friends
were in attendance.
BOB'S HOUIS:
MON. tin SAT.
t :JO .. 6
OPIN ':~~IL l :JO
SUNDAY
1M
BARGAIN CENTER
1812 Newport Bl., Costa Mesa
TUES.· WED.· THUIS. SPECIALS
•ouND Snack Tables 1'"•20• ""' 1111 DICORATtD Ret. J.tt
Boys & Girls Sweaters ..... =: '2"
Lacr.es Robes 100"' .,.... ..... ~." '5"
Ladies Sweaters ~~1c ":: • '4"
U... a ' ll1 ..... 14.tl-1UI
JWAY........-.... 1..,...,
Kitchea Dispenser 199. '·"
12"
..... ,..., Tea• '•QI a.., w,.,
1" High Candle "' --. "·me-66c
wltli zetez ,.........,_,......_ hf.1.tt
,., ...... ., Dlzlllt ·-Cinderella Hair Spray:'.,.,... 68c · ...,.11 ......... sue u...1 ...
Lanolin Plus .. o... LMt.. .... 1.1• 66c
LADID
Ladies Tennis Shoes .... ",:; 8Sc
Decorated Bathing Caps ~'.':; 89c
•IFY IOl9 S11 OP t llCOUTD HUYTWUeHT
Glasses ~ -'1"
llPIAT OP SILL OVT-u.Dtll Fo~ Slippen .... ft< ~-~-57c
AMOtc.Alt MADI
Thermal Blanket ""· T .. ~ ... '·" ,,,, ........au..n. ..... ...-,.
SIT OP J MNIWRI
Roaster Baller Pans .... ,,. 49c
Air Mal Paper .. :,..·~~ ......... 36c
D•ALMIAftWW Plaitlc Trasll Cans .... i.e..., C:. T' '""' ................. Detergent ru..:-2, .... ... •· 22c
~, ........ ,.... ""' a . . ... a... • w ID ~ tnct•L -Jtc
Wortr Glows .... ":' :::--,,. 99c
Mallie Sari*=.,-:, 2 ... 29c
Ult_ .... ,
1112 NIWPOIT ILYD .. COSTA lmSA PHONI *"7161 -_,,.
YAST P...._ IN llAI
Aaaisting Mi.91 Hahn are
Mrs. Doria Hope and Mi's.
Harold Trapp, decorations;
Mrs. Jack Brobact and
Mrs. Audrey E r i c It s o n ,
hostesses; Mrs. R. L .
Holman and Mrs. Lilla
Scally, j 0 b opportunity
Sweet Adelines
Harborlites Cb apter , Sweet Adelines convenes
«Mlry Monday at 8 p.m. for
meetings in College Park
School, Costa Mesa. Further
lnformatiOll about t b e
women's club may be
secured by calling Mrs. Pat
Partin, 540-0070.
Garden Club
Mrs. William Gallavan,
~mber of Huotington Hill s
Garden Club. will furnish
location inlomiat.ioo at ~
8139. The club gathers the
second Thursday of each
montq at 8 p.m.
Look forward to Spring.
Crochet open shell-stitch
jacket to wear with dresses,
slacks, skirts. Use tpOrt
yarn.
Open shell-stitch is most
popular with smart set!
Crochet jacket quickly. Pat·
tern 7344 : sizes 32-46 in·
duded.
FIFTY CENTS (coins) for
each pattern -add 15 cents
for each pattern for tint·
class mailing and speclal
handling; ottierwise third·
class mail will take three
weeks or more. Send to
Alice Broolcs the DAD. Y
PILOT. 10 5 Needlecraft
Dept., Box 1&3, Old QielJea
.station, New York N.Y.
10011. Print Name, Acldret1,
1Jp, Pattern Number._
!Sears·!
np nail
rondiaioner
protect&
yo.r ..a •
hel.,. PHftet
splitting, peeHng.
hneking, ebipping
~fluid ..
.... OD I.RP da.i1f
!Gr he.utiful nails ia ~ 2 web. lUlP ia diif oaly MNtal pro-
... Ind kttatio .... ,
c:iaeditiooer. No l>"O-
llCt\'° coat " oeccs-_,.
~ .................... ....-; . ._~----------~
:Au RoA.Ds uAo ri Sears
• 4 • I • I .. , , . --..... ~ tll "' • __ ,,...I
MolldlJ, ""° 25, lM . . DAJLY PllOT IT .......... , .................................................. .
./
'1* '5\1\1\DEALTD Ill g~ SPA
'2ND BIG YEAR IN ORANGE COUNTY
AlllVERSARY CELEBRATION
MEMBER of ..
'COME I
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1'1E
FAMOUS
HOUDAY
&llUI
''lfT us
SHOW
YOU
RJN WAY ·
TO lOSE
UP TO
IN 20
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F<>R MEN
& WOMEN
~ w
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
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OF.·~.
MUST BE IMMEDIATE MEMBER OF FAMILY
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FREE DEMONSTRATION OF OUR
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COMBINING THE LATEST FROM •••
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• Mineral Spa Whirlpool • Ultra Violet Sun Tan Rooms
• Finnish Sauna StHm Rooms • Invigorating Electrical Ma..-ge
• 0.Hrt Dry Heat Rooma • Relaxing M.chanlcal M.snge
• Private Tiled Stall Showers • Personal Supervlslon
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3 BIG LOCATIONS
OPEN 1 DAYS A Wiik
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HAltBOR SH. CTR.
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• Anaheim
826-0381'
P11U hel Sh. Ctr.
622 I. KATELLA
11
... '
11 DAIL v "LOT
· New Life
For Bea
Benadaret
By BOB THOMAS f
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
"Yes, It'• lovely on the
desert today," aald Bea
Benadaret, speaking on the
telephone from P a l m
Springs. "But then, every
day ia beauWul to me."
Miss Benadaret, atar of
t e I evis1on's }(log-running
"Petticoat Junction" spoke
with understandable feeling.
She said doctort have told
her that a tumor on her
lung has bee11 di#Olnd by
radiation treatment.
The actreu did not make
any predioUooa for the
future. "But 1 do know that
I feel fine . better than I
have felt ln years," she
said. "They tell me the spot
on my lung hu disa~ared,
and 1 believe them.'
Long one of the bwiest
performers of radio and
television, Miss Benadaret
had lived with the threat
of cancer for five years.
During a routine checkup.
a spot waa discovered on
her tun&, then lt diaap-
peared.
Her dootore r e m a i n e d
vigilant, and she was X·
rayed at leut every three
months. Meanwhile she cut
down her usual quota of
· -three to four packs ol
cigarettes a day.
"Three weeks before Jut
ThanlugMn&. I had another
X-ray. and the spot had
reappeared." she said. "The
doctors told me to come
back in two weeks for
another look. The spot had
grown."
Meanwhile she was in the
midst of shooting the fifth
season of "P~tticoat June·
tion." She told none of the
company of her ailment and
resisted urglnp by her doc·
tor for immediate surgery;
•he wu concerned ttlat her
absence would imperil the
show. Ftnally her family
prevailed upon her to un·
dergo the operaUon. It took
place Nov. 2&.
Afterward, abe related,
the hmg 1urgeon told her,
"I found the tumor, but I
have to tell you l could
do nothing about It."
"Wby?" she asked.
"Because if I did, you
would be an invalid for the
rest ot your U/e."
Treatment was recom·
mended at Stanford
University Hospital, where
she wu subjected to a
linear accelerator, a super·
voltage method ol radiation.
ACTOR 'ILLUSTRATED' FOR MOVIE
Rod Steiger Tak•• 3 Deya For Makeup Job
By VERNON SCOT1'
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -
Rod Steiger, an odds-on
favorite to win the best ac·
ting award this year.. is
about to slip hls moortngs
for a new movie which re-
quires three full days jUJt
for b:im to be made up.
In "The illustrated Man"
-which co--stara his wife,
Clalre Bloom -Steiger
portrays a man tattooed
from neck to toes.
lr.uch as be loves his art,
the actor naturally eschew·
ed t.Ke opportunity to be tat·
tooed all over bis body -
even at no charge.
lnatead the makeup folk
at Warner Bros. 7 Art.a have
made silk acreen stftldls,
outlining iM tattoo marks.
Thereafter they hand paint
the designs on Steiger. A
tickli•b busine9s to be sure.
Also tedlons.
For those scenes in which
be is seen dothless Steiger
takes a tranquill.zec and
_ spendJ ttlne days being
painted before he goes on
camera.
Merdfully, these 1eene1
are rare.
Crossword Puzzle
ACl\OSS
1 Rln9lnt of ltells
5-Strilt
10 Devoid of lnterul 14 Sh1kts.-prarl111
villain 15 Dod9so11 hero Int U tutor's
11other
17 E1rlltt OCCUttlflCI 1' L1g1I right
to USt 20 Auttuw'1 cone em
n-du• 22 Kind of
actot 23 Sus,.nd 25 Ele1111nt1ry
'artlclu: ortl endlnt
26 Glided
30 811tlt 31 Tr11ts 1ullclously
)4 Fren~ 36 ,.olnt
iuestlan )I ..-aktt's lbbrlvl1tk>fl
39 Sutes 41 Do 11u.s lcal
work
43 U=lsltfJ fa le 44 Clftttal
tfl ...
4' -Hl9treay
47E.,..U
49 Hu•• btlnp 51 Oodtcantst
le land 52 Canliw
Sl IC Ind of show
55 "But Mt
no-I"
57 Vtttlal ltlnlst
51 Contort
l>l IC Ind of pot• M Rtlat1119 to iont of
47 Across
•• l•pl•tnt U. pl1lslr1:
S1111ll
~luswes
" abflc .. r .. lnlnt
1111111
70 Lacking
ruson n ltmbtrs of
tht fMllJ
Pongld1t
DOH
l Plu•blng It•• 2 R1c1lv1 for wort done
3 Old 4 '11CH S~td • alt product 7 Hlf'ftstlnt •aclllnes
I Coet ....
9 It flttS ..
II t21 .... "
3/25/61
10 H0111tco••"9 35 lltchanlztd Day artillery,
chncters 1.9. 11 Opposition 37 Lets dani)tfous
12 S11111 40 Hiii 13 Invitation 4Z As 11uch as to conttnd pesslblt
11 Finish 45 Fabricate 24 ,.ass off IS 48 lelght·
genuine llfttt's
25 Deems fHt .. t
Taylor's 50 lost recent field 53 B1co1111 ready 2' lmptrt• fOf 7 Down lnently 54 Bird
facetious 55 Alpha's 77 Light bt•• n1l9hbor 21 Army • 5' Pre(IOsltlon
rout1111 57 Half: Prtfla
2' Co11t to 5t "-boyl":
•end 2 WOfds J1 Calltoral1's '°Safari
819 -'1 '" too4 32 EngllP health com,ostr '2 Oly11plc 33 Short for Ptnlns11la
off k t 1111t111ls "°"" '5 k Ind of ....,.
&. ., ' ' '._
"l'w• BlbHI Mlee'
Government Sarire Proves
4 •
Am~j~g 'Barn'Pr_oduction
By TOM TTft1l • ..............
U 100 cu . talDI a
Uptwetpt A«J a a c:Mt
hea•.111 lacl t• •Jth
newomoer• and tum• illto
an a11u11tn&. enjoyable pr.
ductioo, then you've ,_ a
pretty fair dh'edcrial t.leDt
-1'bicb ii whit 1be Bun·
tingtoo Beach P!aybome
bu lD the person ol Howard
R. Solomon ant hit "'ho
BHnd Mice."
While tbll II bll'dtJ the
mott im....,,_ oOering
ever mount.eel • tbf Blll'll'1
barte4boe stage. Jl astalnly
Starft March 27
"THI MAN FOR
ALL SEASONS" •
.
••••••••••• • .
Picture·
Peeks --·!
~ ., .... ,.I ••• e ~
Tbl winDer, and Mill.~
pion, receiving the A~tlDJ
Awards "Oscar'' w '!Best
Picture" opens a b~i, ·
hoWl u everytbiq be&lnl week on tbe big, wide
unravellna at once. the Lido theatre's
The ebief aa-Ani erace of . "Two Blind .nc." is \bat screeD this Wednesday ~
lt w tW'tinl a number of J.n1, A Mu For AD See1~ ,
ad'evffoped taltDb toward Paul Scot!eld, Wendy~
an avoceClon ill commWlity. and ~rt Sb.aw lead tt,.
11'.lea ter. _.... _ brln nuc cast that p
-u··.::.:~Sli
. ~ Thomas More (Soofiela) lfv~
fA'll E reallltkall1 u t.be lt.orf
• • ....... the struU1e ol ma.
110M1 • IPCllM9 dWI &099 VV9UI man intenroven 1n a
111 WT IN.JOA It.YI. \ confrontation of king againlt
UllM '9111SULA • t1J.41tt JI fPh:itual leader.
•CHILD WtTM PAllNT ONLY• King Henry (Shaw) ~ff
to diYorce h1I q u e ~"/!,
OHN t i41 ·SUNDAY 2:11 Catherine ol Aragon. UnalM
to secure the conaent of • e IMDS TVUDAY e Pope, Henry lnab tdth
ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATION -
H ST FOtl96N RLM
Rome and esiallil.sbea 1he
Olurcb of England. 'fti6
churcb 1encttone Ae
tovereign'• new mam.c-to
Amte Boleyn. ~ Sk 'lbom».
u chancellor ol the court -r:.-----am. ..... "" 96Dll1 friend to BmrJ, l!W FOR --refUlea • ~
.. • bJ "'-'!'!!!-Al!!!
and
TGD)' Rk:Aard.oa•a
"SAILOI PIOM
•fllALTAl•
STAITI WIDNUDAT
"THI COMIDIANS•
_, "POINT ILANr
,
• ,,
I I
I
I
t
I
,
r
e .. J
~
' a
0
·I • •
.. •• ~ •
M 0 N , .-. '
.... =. ..... (Q (IO) ..,
II"' • ._ ..._ tQ <tD>
Robert ANMttlJ.
0 ....... (50)
fJ llr O'Cllc* .... CC> ........
(llon9!) '&l~ldlHI a..111.
)oh111.
m n. ,...... CC> c!O> m,., .. <JO> ........ . mn 111a11 ldlllt ........ w. •••<ll,_-...: CC>.-
. ,
111e1." A 1t1M • .... 9' ljs.~ -......... dist-. II .... • .. M....., tw LIGHT-HIARTID-Robert Goulet and wife Carol
E..... ~~· :'. ':: .. -.::.:! Lawreuee atar In toJUCht's color special, ''Kiss Me
l:lO fJ Tiie ...., ... tQ (JO)
G)llmltQ(lll)
.,.. .......... CC>(IO) Kate" at 0:30 p.m. on Channel 7. Aiao ap~ in fJ..9.w> ~ .. the musical are Jessica Walter, lrlichael en,
m liklllMI .., (31)
• ~ "m ta••• " ::; 1_J_w_ea_11_u_n_llhl_"_• _Marty __ 1n_g1_es_an_d_R_wise __ n_Nype. __ _
PlfWa fllmle ........... Ir
fl).,.. ... .....
• , .... -"&II&. ., ...... .
87 SJ •I" J ...... (Ill)
~.:.:.-·""
tit ....... Clfll ~ • r ................ v...a.•
..... ..... •ntlat .. "" Mt .... ._ ,_. WtftwlllM 1i1r "'* ............ M1ldlll ... ~ 11 'Alln • mn "Tiie , ..... ., ........... 11111,. " ... *'· ...... .,, s. ... .... .,..., ,,... .... lie ..
-tit ......... ....,. .................. ...................... w.. ............ ....
TEUNISION VIEWS
'Highlights'
Set Tradition .. ,.... ... ... ..,., ........... ""'r--------------------' .. ..., . •• LM Ulr (Ill)
............. (Ill) ·--"' •• 'l .......... (Q ·-··-
__ ........... ..
fiii• ....., ... i.... ... .
ftf.11 ............... .....
18 fll9 • f I t fC> (JO)
.,.,,, .... (tO)
.... ~ ......... LllPk CC> Sttl!MJ DIMe t .. JlilJ .....
Aultl• "*"
.. ,.... (C) (30)
• .. llltlbt ... ,, .... ... ,,... .. s. •...J:.• ..... Pl1• •M .II...,.
T UF\0/IY
• T.....-: tQ (la) Dia lllCIC .. ,.,
............ tQ(JO) ........ """' • m .... CC> .,... otMr
ilij, " ,.,...., • ,. , ...... ""' M .._ 11t llfec:ta If,,.._ .... ,. ..... ............
11:11 • °"" O'Cllc* ~ CC> (30) ,,,.,, ~.
•• 11• ........ CC> (JO) """Sldtw. ...... « ............. ,IW' (lltmf) '4J-.M l.Ql9'.
D It..: CC> (JO) latlr Wri ....... ...., ......
(ihtlll) '55 -""' Ktnl'llt. [j. wnl Mulllut.
• ... ,,.. (C) (30)
• 1111111: CC> .,,.. ,,.. ,.....
(ilm) '5s-ftrrlll ,..,, ... ,.
pnt Wlllllllc.
(cmlltdy) '44-.NIMIJ l,... ....
" ANridl "" ,,...... (....,
'4l-Mnl'"7 L,-.
U-... "T1ll 9-t Fflf' (*'-) '5l _ .............. ....,.~
n) 'S3 lshrt Stiel.
e:11 e.,.. • ..... <*-> .... ..a "'tu atll' <....., '57 17-a., ~ Ollm -.. _,.. ..... '"" ..... ..... . ............ _. .
..... 0-........ •) 'M -Mall c--. Mlllle
11••..., .... .., ..............
SBYIN• THI
Public anil Trade
COMPLE1I ~SllVICE
'42-4321
.... '*!.. .....
ly CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -Televiaion, young u tt is,
already bu built some traditions. One of them is
the "highlights" program.
SUNDAY NIGHT TV preaented tile em:m.al
highlights of an ice show thtt pla~ -~ the
country. Nm Friday there will be h1g!IJ1gbta of a
circus making its tour.
U you've seen one ice show or one cricul. 10\1
have pretty well seen them all, yet there is a fa&-
dnation to both that time cannot dim -wtlich
comes through on the tube.
NIC'S HOUR-LONG lee special had nothing
unusual to present Sunday but wu graceful. tune.
ful and colorful, with ~ and there the required
touch of broad comedy.
N. the seuon1 roll by, the only thing that teem
to chanae in ioe shows is the music, the costumes,
and the host.. The music is more likely to be from
the latest Broadway hits than 'The Skaters Wiltz."
OVER THE SEASONS and on all three net-
worb, the ke shows have all ta.ten much the aame
form, and even the hos ta act the same -they ar-
riYe gingerly on states and make Joket about bow
badly they wte.
NBC's "Hlghllghts from the Ice Capadei of
'88" wu really not mueh different from ''Higb-
llghte from the Ice Capades of '67," except that
the comedy team of Rowan and Martin wobbly in
the feet, were around in place of pa.st host& In an
effort to add a little more spice to the proceedings,
Jeame Sommers was on band tor a couple of 1e>ngs.
THE SPICIAL was one of only two mideve-
ning network programs that were not renms. There
was a repeat showing of ABC'• movie, and on CBS
'liie Smothers Brothers ahow and "Mission Impos-
sible" were both around for a aecond time .
The other fresh abow, NBC'a ''HJgh ChaparTal,"
was of interest primarily becallle of the appear-
&n<:e ol Ramon Novarro, ~ an important silent
movie star, playtng a priest.
NBC HAS ADDED two comedians as retulars
to the summ« eertes replacing the Dean ikrtin
Show. They are Paul Lynd and Shecky Gt-eene.
Stars of the lbow will be Frank smatra Jr. 111d
Joey Heatherton.
The next~ National Geographk sped.II. on
April 16, will be a story of Portuguese cod fllber·
men whose wort takes them onto the seu for six
monthJ at• time. The show is called '"lbe Lonely
Dorymen."
RICOMMINDID tonight: '10a Me Kate,"
ABC, 9:30.11 PST, Robert Goolet and Cerol Law· r~ in an ldapt.Mion of Cde Port«'a 20-ye&Hld
m\lllcal comedy hil
Dennis t'lae Menaee
!\ •• '
,. _.....,. --· ...... . .,.
" DAJl Y PILOT Monday, lbrdl 25. 1968
. I Sears
•. With
. .
ALLSTATE RAYON
GIJA SMAN
30,MONTH Nationwide Guarantee
Regular Low
Trade-in
Price $17 .95
·99
6.50xlJ
Tubelea
BJackwall
plus $1.81 F.E.T.
and Your
Old Tire
Check These Life-Protecting Features:
lnter·Jocklnr Trad exert.a vise
rriP on road for better trac· tloft. Start and atop quickly.
Silencer Buttons between the
ribs atop the 9C1aealinr aroand
tums and when braldnr.
Contoa:r Sdety sa..lden lin
more than waJl.to-waD tnc·
lion on fut, tirht eomen.
ALLSTATE PUHnger Tin Guarant;:le
G..,.. ... Aoh .. ; All fallur• Of lhe tire ruultlas fTotn aormal t~I ~ w defect. In material or 'lt'Orlr.m&aablp. l'H .. ,. : 'l'or \he Ill• of the lb• orlslaal tread. WU. ...._ De: it.)16lr u.11 punctur• at no charse. la
tile -of fallun Ill ex.e11&n1e tor Ult tlrfc. replaCe It. eh&rs!!IS ealy the .-Uoa of curnnt rerul&r ... 111ns price pl\11 ......U ._.. Tu I.bat np,...ata trwd l&Md.
T.-. weer.Oft o ........ G~A~; Tr"'4 ,,_,.ftl l'w •• '1'1111 •-bw of 1110atlla 1,.c:IOtd ...,. I De: ta ~ for t.be tJre,_ replec9 lt. U.. ~ 1'tlf1l1ar Mllfq price plua nd..-..1 l:lr· i.. tM ton...1Jls allowance.
SIZE ~t:juw ~1.a1~~: IZE j=t!uvsj ~ .. '~: l'rtee l'dee Ta:s l"r"'9 l'rtee Tu
Tubelaa Blackwal1s Tabelea Wbitewall9
Ubll SU.ti !5% ' ll.lt 1.81 UOxl Uo.95 !5% li.'11 1.81
1.ihii no.IS !a~ 16.'71 S.CI '7..16sl4 Siiff" ~ UM UI ---------,,,aiu f%S.N 11% 1u1 u1 1.nxu ssua u~ ltM 1..11
---1-'---t----·----J---1---1---1-
Ulla' '1UG 11% %0.M SM '7.'7Sxll SU.II 14% 1tM U1
Now Available at S-:1 S'11fZU OORD RADIAL TffiES. ............... u.--i~I ~
Ullrl• SS4.N !a" 1 18. n US 8.Uxl4 SS'f.N !5% 1U1 U1
'7.Usll "iiiil° 16% l l'Ul-Ul Ne lloMJ Dowa • ~~
Ask Your s.n.!ft '.Allstate.S.leunan About Them!
Now Only
49
Each
Installed
• !Wit to eatlut ... •tfetfonn .:•--t·.IMdtU.
·e Gtn. )'Mir ut....w. iapnnd
. rWlq ..t.rt ...... •·
e1111.. hancllt.s tmtrol for
---..... clri-n.
Midi Pf.ti 11% r IOM S.M Yw a., at ..... • Credit!
BJ EA.Jtl, ~&EY ...........
PA.Lii ~ '"1 'l'Mn" •u no ~ ~fti: Ult leii* that
trantpired ~ the ~ lodler
rown tn Palm ~ SQnclay a. '"Wi:'io ... II . ten c1us1ere4 .
about him, tM,AntJla tblrd bueman
WU liplD& auto .
No, li wasn't the cluly Mexican
tmPOrl. Leo Rodriiuez. Nor was It
aiuclr; llilatQn, tbe .. natlle infield-<>Ul·
field ltlr .equired bl a trade.
It wu Fountain Valley's Paul
Scbaal, 1'M LI blUlDg .:m.
The notlcm o1 Schaal hittinc .m
boUl.e• the IDilld -like eeeing a
~ tn the nlebl Clelrty, you bne
a ,vlata~ pl Ollture ~
· '"I~ can't explain )t. J .-I a1n
just .... agreaslve at C1M · plate, ..
lie u14· ~. aft.I' ••• tn.fcs-
foqr tn ~ Aa&tb' ... 1 .. to.SD
Frmc:ia(o ••
'Ibey ~n't cheap lbota elt.Mr.
i~ WU -.hard.anaab.
1"u. ~ reco;rct, SdLla1 1'lt .111 tor
the Angela tut year -a mart tbit
Mrpld bJm a trip to El PllO aeet
the end of the aeuoo .
... I'm just loi.nl lQ> to tbe p1ate
with the Idea of •winlinl at the ftnt
good pitch I see. I haven't cbmCtd
the structure ol my awing at all. ..
Bill RiCMY. ttte Aqela' manaaer.
f
Meehanized . ~age Attaek
•
WHHLOCA.ll WONDIRS -~in for a lay-~. ~ Boman (3) of the Br Wbirlaw1y1
(BrootlJD) ii ~ between two playen in Nation-
al Wheelchair BUketball tournament action Sun-
day in Clllcago. Ten teams ~resenting five wheel·
chair conferencel in the Umted States are repre·
aeJJted. Players are wounded war veterans, acct·
dent, birth citied or polio 'rictlml. j .. L. .
'We'll Be Baek!' Porsche Boss
I
Blasts Start Southern Pride Shown
By Tar Heel Delegation ~:~~~~:i~ .. "h"•
"Damn good team! Dmnn good
team! Damn good team!" Tbe chant
wu repeated several times while the
University d North Carolina band
kept time with its or.man drum
corps.
Theo tbe impresSlve delegation from
tobacco ooantry changed the beat-
"We '11 be back! We'llDe back! We'll
be back!"
These were the most prominent
yells 1enerated in tbe entbualuttc
N~ Carotina rootlni ted.lon when
U,. tar &ie1I W'fft reoe~ thetl' &1fll'ds ia. fbe ...... of the Los ~litf Spcsta' AnM moaieaU after
they W fallen vtd1m to UJ;,"LA, 71-56,
I ' •
ue u o au
WIDTE
-·WASH ,
a cs
good team" which la coached by a
guy named Wooden.
With Lew Atclndor, Lucius Allen,
Lynn ShackeUord. Kenny Heitz form·
Ing the nucleus, John Wooden should have solid gr()W)(f., for claim to a
fiftth NCAA crown come next season.
Too, there's a red-shirted player
named St.eve Patterson who should
pop a few eyeballs come 1969. He
was a CIF player of the year at
Sarb M1Uia High and 1parkled •s
Bruin frechrnan.
He was held out this year so the
1-8 whll hM three years of varsity
~ renWMng. He fiFes to
be a nuaiet cm a star«udd«l group,
ohing polnf.poteDtial, &ooct rebound
strencOl-And, joining Patteraoo is Curtis
Ron. up from this year'a mbei\en
fralnnui quintet. Ro•e ls a great
outllde 1booter.
S'o, as Pnm staller 'Roger Csrlson
obeerved. U..'1 a good chance the
foor 1988 fiDali.U 1'fD repeat for the
.. NCAA title tbllrney.
And witb UCLA back on ttage, the • ..tnatt lbaaJd alto be the aame.
l¥C.4A Neta
o.. cu.Illa reoeer w a a
durable little c8Ils left no room for
argument about the ftnlsh of Sebring'8
12 hours of enddrance Saturday but
the foot-race •tart came under fire.
~ voice heard above all others
calling for a change came from a
man who ahou1d have bffn happy
about e~J. Porsche racing db'ector Husdike von Hanst.e-in.
His cars Jeem destined to dominate
the world sports car racing cireuit
under lllds rules which outlawed last
year_:_.1 'beat -the Ferrari P4 and
the rord Mark 4. B6t Von HaDltOl objected to the
...aDed uMam start~ wldcb the
drtvta rtm ac:roa a eoncnte apron
to fhmr' car a, buckle a. .tart the
enpies, puD oat ol angle parting
spectt and go fithta!Dng toward the
ftnt of a ckne.n turns on tb• 5.2-nule
coune.
"'Ibey are running a risk of gettin~
their best machlnea bent at the start,"
Voa Han.stein complained. "Intelligent
race or1aniurs bave • long time
ago forgotten the IAM-atart.' It IJ now used only 1n the 24-hour
rM!t at~ Framce, eacb June
llllS at Sebring NCb March, with
tptclaJ pmn.lulon ol the FIA, in·
tem.tlonaJ auto rac:inJ rulet makers.
There b.D1 • better aloft man tn
the 1ame titan Schaal and 1f be ooold
hit only J::!I tbt Anee1a would ba.e
bas..,ra No. 1 in.fleld. But at .l8a
t&ey taa't t>ll1 blm.
Btpe7 .-fJvt pla1Wt to Hottvme
SUnday, trtmm.lng the roster to 33.
DiJpatched were Steve Bovley 1 Ja-fl•
Tatum, Tam Eean. a.ICk V!uan and
Steve K~y.
Rigney told tbe DAILY PILOT Sun-
day he will keep Rodrigues with tbe
varsity thi$ year.
The Angels were in Hott.me ~1
to play the Giant. again. Tbey don't
r&tUrn to Palm &pr.Inc• until SMurdaf
alternooo, when thtJ play Cllveland.
Bulls Coach
Calls Lakers
2-manTeam
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Coach John
Kerr says his Chioaio Bulla can beat
Los Aqeles in the Natklcal Buketba.ll
Association's W~ D I 'f i 1 l o n
playoff• becaUJe tbe !Aken have gone
back to a tw<>-man offense.
That two-man offense wu too much
for the Bulls on Sunday night as
Jerry West and Elgin Baylor led a
109-101 Laker victory In the first game
of the best-of-seven series.
The Lakers and Bulll go at it the
aeoond game of the 1et ln Los Angles
tomght before returning to Chicago
for the third game.
Kerr was right about the Lakera
going back to two men. Baylor, with
23 point$, and West, with 33, combined
to take 55 of the La.ken' 88 shots.
But their combined field goal total
of 'n is almost 50 percent accuracy.
The pair scored 59 percent of the
team's points.
"The team didn't play well," Laker
Coach Bill van Breda KoUf 1ald after
the game.
However, during one stt'etch in the
flrat quarter, the Lakers got a fast
break going and outscored QUcago
18-4. They were never behind after
that.
West said after the game he "threw
some bed ~ aod I got real tired
in the third quarter. Bllt I guess
thafs •t happens when you Jay
off like I did."
West was playing his first game
after missing three 1tralgbt with a
puUed groin muscle. Welt called the injury "one Of the most aggravating
of my career."
CHICAOO Lot ANOILH 0 , T • , T
lloott< 10 7 .. ,, lnlor 1' '"' l2
Ci.mens l l·I , 0•"' J 1·2 7
E~klne 5 ... 14 COUl!ls 0 ~, s ........ 1 M J CreWford s 1·2 " HHkl"l , 1-2 5 ....... , .. 2 0.2 • Mel-• 5 5-4 u lmtloff • N 10
ltot>I-3 O.t ' Muell« 3 .., 7
sioen I H • Wnl 1J 7-1 33
W1thl"9'on f ~5 " TO!tla lt 2).lJ 101 Tott It " 21·J3 109
ClllCtGO n 22 u n -101
Loo /ltlftlft 30 n 11 19 -'°' F0<iltd our -Nont.
Total fouls -Clllt .. o 2S, Los An"tn 24.
Allendllnce -7'"2.
SOUTH CAROLINA
FIELD HOUSE LOST
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -The in·
terior of the University of South
Carolina field house, site of Gamecock
basketball games for 41 years, wu
destroyed by fire early today.
The last scheduled game in the s.-...at field house was played
March 2 when South Carolina lost
to Ncrth Carolina State. A multimillion dollar coliseum being
built two blocks away is to be ready
for uae when the 1~9 basketball
season opens In December.
Campus police braved heavy smoke
to rescue university trophies from
the office of Coach Frank McGuire .
Students formed a human chain to brinl out athletic equipment stored
ta the buldin1.
WHAT THE &1*#%&.11 -Angel skipper Bill Rigney d<>esn't appel1'
too pleased here as be watches his team drop a 4-0 game 'lO &y
Sadecki tnd the San Francisco Gianta Sunday afternoon in Palm
~rings. Alter the two hour, 15-minute game, Rig said: "Well, we
didn't slow that one up too mudl, did we?"
For Second Time
Alcindor Voted Top Star
In NCAA Championships
LOS ANGELES -Towering Lew
AlcJ.ndor waa named today u the
outstandJng player in the national col·
leglate basket.ball champiooships alter
lea<Ung UCLA to it1 fourth title in
five years.
The Bruins crwbed previously
unbeat.en Houston, 101-69, Friday night
and then came back for a 78-M
triumph over North Carolina m the
title game SDturday·
The 7-foot-llh Alcindor scored 5.1
points and hauled down 34 rebounds
in the two games.
He is the fourth player in history
to be voted the hooor two years in
succession.
The others are Bob Kurland,
Oklahoma State. 1945-46; Alu Grou,
Kentucky, 1948-49; and Jerry Lucas,
Ohio State, 1960-61.
Three other Bruins ftfe named to
~ all-tournament team. With Aldn·
dor on the select five were Mike
Warren, Lucius Allen and Lynn
s:1ackellord.
The filth man was North Cacollna'1
Larry Miller. Player of the year Elvin
Ha~s of Houston failed to make il
Shackelford was accorded the honor
on the bull of his 17 points and
great defensive play in the vict.cry
over Houston.
Allen and Warren set the tempo
of the game early in the finale.
Allen wound up with 30 points for
the two games and was all ovec-the
court against the Tar Heels, stealing
passes on the Bruins' full court zone
press.
Warren was the court general, gutd·
nlg the offense and keeping North
Carolina's fine sophomore Chari.le
Scott fairly well bottled up.
But Alcindor was the real story.
He tossed in 34 points. He blocked
~ Tar Heel shots'; five ol them
off the hand of·&-foot-10 Raitt Clark.
And Lew even stole the ball at m.ld·
court 81ld dribbled in to score a crowd·
raiser early in the second half.
''They are by far the grea~
bask-etball team I've ewr seen,"
North Carolina caacb Dean Smith
said.
The Tar Heels, ~hampions ol the
Atlantic Coast confereqce, tried to
slow down the torrid Bruins in the
first half by using a "four corner"
offense -aendin• ~ player to each
of the four corners of the fore c(l(lrt
and hoping to get the ball to All·
American Larry Miller or Scott.
But the defensive efforts of Mike
Lynn, Ke.n Heitz and Schackel!ord plus
the ever-present Mr. A stopped the
attempt. The Bruins went into a Ul
zone defense and won goiq awq.
Amigos Win,
Bid So Long
To Anaheim
ANAHEIM -After playing their
last game th£s season in the American
Basketball Association, the AnaheJm
A.mlgos may be bidding Anabdm
goodbye.
The Amigos dropped the Oakland
Oaks 147-135 Sunday night to dole
out the 1967.QJ season u IM Selv&ie
scored ~ points, Warren Dau 21
and Steve Cbubin 28.
,pllillellflale llilet .... te UCLA
II tile ftaala, "Wei at lead we're
-• nr. . . . a• t umber fem.''• •oleecl &o nyone wmmi
ti lldta. n. Tar Bela were rated ,.... Ii ai. ._.,, aemee polla at
UCl's Wilhite Wins Crown
A spokesman for tbe Amlgot 1114
a f t e r the g a m e that o w n er 1
and other club offtclals may announce
thlJ week that tbe dub wtil mow
to Los Angeles.
The AmJgos rarely drew more thmt
1,000 spectators at the Anabelm
Convention Center lllJ 1eaaon. 6e ... ef 1118 nc-lar IHIOIL
Ehta liar• a n ct Don Cban91 of
HOllltoft detervtd a NDdlna booTa.
tiaD far lat IOinl oat to plct op
IMil' .-.arda In Ule polt pme
«ftlDOUllll.
2nd Straight NCAA Diving Titk
UC lrvlDt put the wraps on a highly
neeudul nrtmminC aeuon Satur·
day, taking tbtrd place In the NCAA
C!Olle,. divl*>D nrlmmlnC cham-
Jl'cmablp• ln Atlanta, Ga.
OMcb Al InriD'• IWl.mmera finished
Wttb 188 polnta. OaJ State (Long
leech) won 1be mtlt whb S'9 points,
Adlqton UnlYerlft.J (Tau> bad 216.
OcdnJ Into tbl mMt. UCI WU seeded
Wllnd UC SIDta ...._.,San Jose
--and KeDJOD c.o ......
Tbt ADteatln pC1td ap a Oock of
palDtl SltU&"'1 I ........ tbe dfvlng
.... ~ -pi.c. ftnlabea in ntmmini ~ta.
Dlftl' B • • Wlllalta trallld Ores aun of Cal .... (Loq s.acb) by u points ..,.. ..... JIAllm.bm1
dives but came back later fn the
day to overhaul h1s foe.
Diving before a packed houae, be
averaged 6 5 per dJve and won.
Then freshman Nm8tloa Mike
Martin took a 1«<>nd In tbt 1,850-yard
freestyle In 17:01.78. Bm Leech ftnlsh-
ed fourth In the event.
Rich Eason waa ltCODd tn the 100
free In 48.35. Pete Sb's ft.I third
In the consolation chm:lrpionahipa in
the D> bactatrote.
In the 100 f11, Bob Sbl?p caw
UCT a fourth wtth a D:~ .tfort.
It WU two cbamphwNpa 1D a TOW
for WlDhlte. List ..,.., , at tbe NCAA
meet ln Commerel, WDlldte aJao won
the dlvtns.
The Oaks, led ln SUnday'a ID'
by Gary Bradds with 32 point., am.Ito
ed in Ule ABA West.vu Dlvtston CID&
But they, too can ptr'bape 1°*
forward to a chance next MUCll.
The Oab own tbe contract of ma ~. one of the rival Natkllil
BMketball .AuoclaUon'1 ~
latt HUOD.
Barry tat out t.bll ,.._ ~~
court ha•le between tbe o.Q • the NBA Sa Fnncilco Waniora;;
OAll~O, 1' --:--.
~~.:1~.~=· :g l'raftr • 1-1 t ._ • =;::~:-:a t=-~ ti• ~ =... : :: L ........ I 1-1 n ..... 11 tt-• ,...,_,1-1.,. •
T•ll Sl »-3' IU '*II fl o.~1• . . . • aa • • -~ J2. '1 ·-~ _ .. -1411W .. L
~ wt -o.1!1.w 1 .._, ~
T .... _.. -OK-& Malllllft A~-\,10&.
BUD TUCKER lee 0Qekey
FIRST COME, FIRST SIRVID -Tbia wu the
acene in the outside h~ of New York'• llldlaon
Square Garden Sunday night a hockey fane broulbt
Hot lte11I Killy Posts Victory
In Idaho SID.Finale
SVN VALL.BY, Id.Ibo -
Jea.a.11 D.11 rac9d tD
vidal"J ta· .. men's ,wst
lllalom SUalfay, lpartint
' France to nctory in the thr-...da7 JntenMional tum U:IJDC toarumlDt.
A wd-plw fiDiab by
~ Goitlc:bel Ill the
woma'1 put a 1 a 1 o m
heipecl l'raace to a total
of ~ pobatl. Aultria filli•b·
ed MCODd with 110 and ~
United Statel waa third witb 11'1. Caada had 111.
A ltead1 pileup of points
In tbe downbJ1l Friday and
the slalom Saturday had
Ptinted toward a Amtrian
vfdciry.
But Dl7'1 1:11• romp
down tbe liant a l a l o m coane. will la ... and a 1-foot ..,_ pw UMt
ll'tmdl ... msSID tlM7 .......
~te..Rlek CbaffM
na MCmd la 1:11.U. a_.... 11.ndd ti l'nmce
Wl*rdbal:ll.'JI.
Acldlat to Allltlta'• pa1a, k.ai lldnm Ud nailed
daft .... la l:allO -aelJ to .. · ._..,.,.. far
m~apte. illr.a. ...... ,. Slat
tllklm, Nmc, Qnme of
Cauda wt -tldrd .. tlll"J ID a.. daJt la 1 :40 •••
* * * DBTROn -I' r a• l ................ ..... N.._..&deJ ........... .._..,..
_. ..... ...._ta
......... 0..-... ..... .,.. ..... ...... .... ....... '""' .....
The Yanteea had it. The Dodiers had it, even in
the unmajeltJc am1omwtlnp of Vero Beach. Now the
Cardinali hue it
'I1le manaier bal it. Bil mme ii Red ScboencYenst
and be wn a great pllyer with the Cardinali and now
he must be a great man~ger.
The Redhead ha; built IOI!>& kind of I baleball
team. The CardinaJI nm avray and hid from the rert of
tbe field in the 1987 Nltional LNaue toumament and
turned it into a boat r~ 'nley WOil the world title from
the Boston Red Sox becauae they would not even be
intimidated by Fenway Part.
Kings Need Ray Floyd's Gamb~ Fuel Cars
OutsideAid Pays Off at Pensacola Post OCIR
* * * LOI ANGaa -A J1a11 .. .._ ....... ,sstno•
--.. .. t7llllll ...... te..-,aeeletle1lflr-
Mlllt' •••1111 ....... *1 ltJ .. •••t•t•all ,......... ti .. 0-..
• l:l'I ". ~·-= =•Mr,a...-...1. .............. ~ .. -... ., .....
... C8lle .. DeertM .....
... ..... "-Tw •• ....... ..., .... lldl ...,_II NHL...._, it ........
Schoendienat manages quietly. He is not a holler
guy. He could oot be called colorful. Be W'8tdlea in
silence as the best team in baseball &OeS through its
spring games and drills. Now and then. he walks over
to one of hil you.nc meo and epeaa to him softly. U RC ever nbea hla voice, k moat be at home.
! There is no wrath tn ttie man, not uen for ampires
wfio make diltuteful declsions or young outlielders who
get hit on top of the head by a fly ball. Nor does
S@oendlmrt rave about ru. team or indhiduDI. No Leo
0$0dler, tbil. No Bill Bipy.
* * * You uk the""'" ..... about the Cardinali and
he apeeb with NYW9,.. ind authority but wlt~
out llourllh.
''We have • pod team," Red uys. "A very
good Mm. Y-. I think we can win tM pennant.
We won It latt yeer and thll It \u•t • good a teem."
If the pleyers pl.y, It wou d have to be iust u
good a tMm. It ls the same tMm that won every·
thing • yur ego. Schoendlenlt ls too clever to argu.
with sucn•, mudt lw mea with the best team In
bateball.
TheN h ftOfftlng MW wtth the Cardinals. No
new fMltt. Afllw this,..,, It wlll be Bob Glbton
ind Ftoocl and C:.,ad1 and lrock •nd Tim Mc.
Carver.
'1f we mate ny chanees," the manager says, "It
will only be to add 1 J0'1D( pitcher or two. In this
~ame, you are llw11J lootine for more pitching. There
i.s never enough."
Outside of tile foregoioe, the Cardinals are still the
Cardinali. This ts the dmnpton.hip team of the uni·
verse.
Thi! team trains at st. Petersburg. This team has
~·· Thia ii the money t'eam.
LOS ANGELES ( APl -
Jf the Los Angeles Kings
are to finish at the top of
the National Hockey
League's Wes t Diviaion,
they'll have to get 90me
cooperation froro a most
unexpected source -the
fiftb..place P i t t s b u r g h
Penguins.
The Kings. by virtue of
their 4-2 victory over the
Phlladelphla Flyers Satut'·
day night. pulled into a first·
place tie with the Flyers.
Los Angeles has three
games remaining in this, the
last week of the season. But
Pbiladelpbla has fotr, the
lut two with the Pengulnc.
The K.inga play Pttt.burg11
Tuesday at the Forum in
the night's only NHL game.
Loa Anielea holds a 6-3 ad·
vantage over them thla
StalOTI.
The 14,003 fans at Saha·
day night's battle saw a
fight-filled, penalty-packed
duel.
The third period was an
Los Angeles. Howie Menard
shot the Kings ahead at the
t :26 mark, taking a pus
from Doug Robinson on a
breakaway.
LeM than five minutes
later Dale R-01fe sewed ;t
up with his biggest goal of
the ~a.son -a.nd his first
ln 52 games.
PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP)
-Ray "'°"' • tryla.c to erue h.iJ tm.,. at a ICllODi
playboy, bat tbe -.,...~Id
Texan .un IJbs to pmble.
The chunky bachelor took
a ooe..iiot 1Hd U. today's
final round ol 1M P-.cob
Open G o } f 'l'Omaameat
becaUM of a 1ambJe tbat
paid off Sunday.
Floyd, wbo wiped oat an
eiPt«r"oke def1dt wttb a
blazln1 M, eaded the elt:bth
hole after drlvint lnto the
wooda. He WU 235 yard•
from the green, but he HW
a six~ openlns hlt•etn
the trees and went for the
bole With • three-wood.
The ball stopped 30 feet
from tbe cup, end Flo7d
knocked in the putt for an
eagle ·3 OD the par Dve bole.
"T gueu it wu a good
gamble," said Floyd. who
turned in a 54-boJe total of
2m, 14 strokes under par
and a shot in front of
George Archer and Tony
Jacklin.
Tom Shaw. the affable
young man who led the ftrst
two rounds with 1COre1 of
63 and 67, wa1 at 20t alter
a 74.
Floyd's bot round wu the
best of hi.a pro caner, and
he credited h i s im·
provement play to a lot of
practice last winter.
1be 2CJ6.i>ounder, w h o
bun't woe a tour title in
three years, said bis reputa-
Uoo aa a playboy baa been embeUUbed.
"Sure, I enjoy a beer here
and there, and a couple of
driDb WW. friends," be
said. "bat I IUte don't pollah
olf a ftftb at evflrf eormr."
Plo.Jd, • boy wonder at
20 who baa not Jet lived
up to pnd1ctioDI 0 l
~tlltu, IOI be beUevet
'I HD p&aJJolf .. well
u 11DJ mu "· but l'w Iott ., pattbaa toucb.
''Wbea 1 waa iD, I rated
MJMlf a ll"Ut putter and
do Wat putt, and everybody
a pad player. All l eould
plaJed much better than I
did.
"But I've worked to where
I c:a play with anybody,"
said FkJyd, who bas won
$17 .m thia season in hJa
beat start net in six years
on the lll'O tour. He bun't
claimed a Utle since he won
the 1965 St. Paul Open.
His cballeniers w e r e
hungry, too. Arcber. wbo
abot a th.lrd·roond 68, has
won only twice on the pro
tour. I
J acklill, who hlrned In a
118, bas never won and
neltlm bu Shaw, wbo shot
• frwt.llDI 40 ln4 said be
felt "lib a telepboee rlngln1
wb• 90body .. w.ra."
DHe MUT, wbo fired a
II and WU tied lit ~ with
Sblw, hasn't been t)c:torioua
aince 1985.
Winner of the -.0,000
tournament will p o c k e t
'1g,ooo, and a victory woyld
clinch a berth m the
Miiters toamament f o r
Jl"lo,cl. DOW ranked fourth
in the race for the six
v.cac.i.Q in the prntielOos
meet at AUlfU.lt.I, Ga. James Moved to Offense,
~ Hits 5 Goals for Rangers
Pro Hockey
Standings
·-~ WLTl"tlef'e.A
""""'•-' 421flt ... 2D1SS
Glen James found • new
position to bit Uking, Jna.t.
log the conversion from
defense to offenae 1
muable move for co.cb
Brian McCaugtiey and the
Coast Rangers toecer tum.
marken .... ...._ Range-"-Yen l6 n n " zu '"
Pro Cage Standings
Jamea fired in five aoaia
and setup two othen S1Jnday
.. the kangtrt m>OCMnd
belplesa Pico Riftl'a, l-0,
at Newport B • I c h ••
Muinera Park.
United Cout = rip-ped Cox of A , T·l,
In the ftnt dlvllion preUm
to give the area tkien a
aweep of SUDda;r bettles.
JI.IMS hit the ~ three
times in the ftnt b&Jf. scor·
ing the trio ID a 1P9J1 ot
11 m.lnute1.
WUU. Katz, latber' Jut
net of a D4r'IF dladJtar
named Cyntbta, eoolltct.d the __. tw flr'lt ball
WO U~ I" "'"""' Jjl J5 ft n Jf2 ..
lfMJbed a 5-0 lead the first ~:C..,.9f: ~ ~ :: : = m :=.:•
45 minutea. °'""'°'' ... roe~ .. .!!. .a ,,. ie B; 1 w -.. l"<t •_•
ctuaJly, they bad die five IM..,.=:'" lr Jr • 11 , .. m • ~1 ,• A Piil~ JO 19 11 n 11' 1.. lli ~
tallies after 36 minutes 3S ~'. Loult1 ~ : a ~ m r.r.s .. ~ ~! l Pllttbur"' ti 1' 12 Jf t1' 21t _,1ucr,-....,. :lJt ll
Katz and Jamee wornd a OMIMld u ·~ 1' .. 1q flt ==-1a·N~11 ~t.1..!,s -~ nifty team of ... SI and "-vv.'":.''t&:,......,,... ill r-Oeolroll ), ....... , lbOOl M....,_.I 4, Pi"*""" 4 ti.
James got the ftrst two -·"=~ llCOl'H ot the last half. Colin __ ... _____ • _________ ;..__ __ _
West rounded out the happy
afternoon with the day's nnat perfecto. SOFT SELL SAM
John Atkinson sparked
UCR with tbree counters
•blle Johll Bl'OW1l picked up
two. Single roaia ft!'e pro-
ly Manin Myers
duced by Roy Roberts and
Stave John90n.
Next S~ the Ranters
trU to F\.lllertDo '1 Lyons
Pvk for a 2:30 tiff while
at the same boar UCR faces
Lonf Beach at Hartwell
Park 1n tbe laUer'1 city .
--------------
. Exhibition BtUeball 0 0 •
r , .
-~-----.t~
'' llt11'X If tlO, SAl'l··A JM 7/llE Ci'! 1!r
t«l/ ... A Jar Cif "!JI fJ~!· .. NIP A S4J.M1
CIJT CF OYJ.Y f.5D A MOlfTHf'
Drag Title
Dale Emery of Pleuen-
tioe, Clllf., ptded I crack
tam of AA fuel altered
drac rldn1 cars to a vic-
tory Saturday Oft!' I top
l1eld of fanny can at
Orange County JnternaUooaJ
Raceway.
Emery, a 29-year-<>ld
coostruotion foreman. drove
Rieb Guuco's "Pure HeU"
to 1 top speed of 199.08
mph in 7.83 seconds to ca~
ture meet honors.
The altered team won
eight times in 12 match
rac... Gene Conway posted
two wins over the alteredl
while Dick Loetrr (Lansing,
Mich.) and CUn Sanders
(Felton, Calil.) each scored
one wi.n.
Raceway fans will get
their first look Saturday at
the new 1168 "Grant Rebel
SST''. The fuel burning car
will be pitted against the
"Engine M a a t e r a Bar·
racuda" of Ray A 11 e y
(Garden Grove) in a beat
0( three match race.
In addition to t b a t
featured event, a round
....
fte ........... , •• .,, ..
BICT-. .... ._ ..... .. .. ..., , .... ,,_ ....... ....., .. ...,_ ,... ............
eltlle U.&. ee•fer11ee ........
,... -atCWlh• ... ,..., ................
... '""' a...t .. -6e proposal ena ..._,. tom·
mlHlollen el 11 aater U.S.
eafereaeee hft Ona ...
pla • Ylrtaa1 ........
preval.
* * * NA SS A U, THE BA·
HAMAS -D o n Drysdale
and Jim "Mudcat" Grant
combined to pitch a four-hit·
ter Sunday to Jtve the Los
Angeles Dodgen a 4-o vie·
tory over PMtlabargtl.
Willie D a v I 1 collected
three or the Dodgers' six
bits, dro.e in a run ud
stole a l>Ne. Teammate ~
Bailey drove in two runs
with a double.
* * * SAN DtEGO -~
Bac .... b el St. Loats eap-
tue4 tile Saa Dle1• QuaJe
pr• feulo•al teianamut
Suday, ...... De•• I•
Rallto1 • f Buenfield,
c.111., n-n, n-u.
* * * robin top g• tournament UCLA, Oreeoa State and
Will be conducted. Su Diep State all W 0 D
Driver Ha...t...n Proffttt aeparate b&Mball tolJirlla. 1 "'" mentl ewer tbe 'tNllbnd wW be makini lU flnt ap. witb the Braim aqueestna
purance on any rac«rack their ~ out of a tbree-
wltb the America• Moton way U. at Rl'Nnlde.
backed "Grant Rebel." The UnttwnltJ of Califor-nia at IUYUUde edted Brie-
* * * MELBOURNE, Fla.
BlClllde Mk:by W r 1 1 h t
overhHJed 1 tu m b 11 n 1
lb:rUJnn SmJtla S a n d • ti lbot a tlDal rOCIDd par 11
IDd dm(ed to • ttne.
ltrob ~etory in the $10,000
Port u.1-.. Inritatloaal
Golf TOlrllament.
Miss Wright, the ladies'
PGA a.Jl..time leadint money wtnner. fllll•bed Witb • M-
hole total of 21t aod Miu
Smltb blew to 71 tor 211.
Miu SmMb Md I ooe-
1troke 1eac1 sutnc into Ult
day's play, but Mickey
cauCht bu with a birdie
on tbe ftnt boll, ma.ed in
front wtlen Mist Smith bad
a bogey on No. 4 and in·
creaMd her marlla to tbree
atrota by the •lltlth.
* * * SANTA BilBARA -ne
powerfu UntvenltJ o I
Sodql C.llfenb track ••4 fleU h•m
demenltrattd lta atrengtlt ta
............ Eat&tr
Relays by seerta1 '72 potau
ud ,....., tneraJ ..........
... , perfenaaeet.
Tile *fadlq N CA A
tkulplea Tretalll ... &.111-ee
ef fou relays ud fur Idler
eveata. la th rd&Ja, tM ..., Ina ., 6e ~ ,....
Hn waa ....... rela1
wMc• s.. ,,.. State ...
la J:lU.
USC~ die.._, ..
rflay .... , .... fw • meet .....,. ,... ell ........... ., ...
Tnjae ._ JMr. VIC ..
.... ,.,. ...., .. l:Jl.1
... -Tnjaa eapQat4 ........ ,..., la 7:1&.t ............ ,.... ....... lbe 1900 pound machine ham Youns UamnttJ '"
la construd*1 completely al late SatardlJ lllcbt bl a.
.uet tubing and fitted with ------------------
• one-piece flberglaa body.
Opponent &y Alley will
be clrivln& hia four·mootb-
old 19f58 Heim H e m i ·
ponred P l y m o u t b Br·
ratoda. with wtUch be bu
adUned speed.a ln exceu
of l .. mph.
During the last two
months ot top cu com· l*iUon .t octR. no two
can have re.cbed the flna1
roUDd ot coa11petltloa man
tban once.
lob Paley
INSURANCE
.......,.._.._......_ ••-•• ,.,.._. ... r-• --.,. .., -' . .. .. -· ....... " ........... ,,_,..._.,..,, .,-...-
MAkf.fT A WlOE SWNG
Note todQy'J lll~t41ticoof
Joc:k fllldcl01.11 bodcswing, ond '
YfN will , .. a wide swing. s ••
the full ~..-ion of hil la,. or"'
• hat..,. to pwh th. elubheod
• far o toy f"'"' his body as
J>C*ible.
·rhe wide •wing "actually in·
CNCIMI the distance the clvbheod
er""
0
travels, o nd it insures o full
stretching of th• go I ft r's ""-S•
el• -a full wind-up en his
baclcswing. tt is th i 1 mu1cular
action that really ~ildl up the
poww.
Try to molte ca wide a swing as
you con. Sut mo k • s u r • ytN
don't swoy late1t1lly to th• right
in your· t ff 0 rt S to widen your
ore. Don't ltt your wei~I move
ounidt yC/4Jr right foot.
•01MINA1'\._._._ ~
,., ~. ~ M. ,.........,.. Dey
CtMt & ,_,, Pint ..... I ,.IA.
"llttt ltACE. 7 lvrloft91-4 ~u
~ * ""· ClalmlH ""rM S.tCIOO ~ L9d CM vai...1ue••I 117
~anta Anita
Entries
LudlY llv9ll CJ Lamllertl
SllY GIMy II IL P~v Jr)
Klnft Pa-IJ Sellers) ,_ ~ IM YaM1I
-·· w. Ga...-y lral ........ ,.,. ,._,., W. J-tralMd ..,r.y,
113
IU
Ill
111
ECNl~ IW Harm1111 1U
Lodoe Ma9lc (0 ,lercel 114
Llnl• MM 10 Halll Iii
Star11111tw IW Mal!omevl 111
MltfTM HCI. 1 1/" mllet. l'llllf' & ,...,.,, 4 'fff• olds and uo. Claim·
lnl. PurM USCIO. ClalmlMI ••Kt SIO,·
L-T-left IM Y-11 114 /IJt Yeu Cl Valtftlvell l I.
0...... W9d (W 1..,.,.1 114
S-' Wll,_ IA l'l-l 12'
L-lt•ldlr IL ''""y Jr) 111
llCOMD aACI. 1 111' rnlltt J ~ar
oldll. C:Wlmlllf. Pur• '50000. (lalml119
Hice 112.JOCM IUOO. •lo Nido (0 ll'Mrul
._,Nie (J Lamber!)
Gaellaroo IM v ai...ruelal
l.llt•ll IL l'lneey Jrl ,~ S'*W CO Hall)
WueMdl .. IW Ha,.,,.tl)
Har1t •lvet IM Y-11
Cllr1t T. II. IA l"l ..... al
Writ' Im """ It Valefttutlal Jack't Alolle CW l lum)
111
117
111
"' 117
117
lit
111
114
111
115
11S IU
1U
115
IU 115
11J
115
11S
115
11J
-19000
Hor. La• ID H1n1
t.OU(Jllol Drffm (M V-1)
Terry I J L•mllfftl
Otvll's •ule CW llu"'I
U~ CA """"•I Mo\'• Zlalo CW Harmat1) •-Hr (L ""CO Jrl Mllll.94 Mate (W Htrri1)
Army Tutor
113
'" llJ
Ill
lit
112
"' "'
A U GSBURG, Germany
(AP) -Lt. Vlnce Casillo
of Franklin Square, N. Y ..
middle guard and l.b:lebacker
on Anny'1 1~ football
team, still keepl hla band
ln football.
A&ide from hit regular
Army duUes with the 24th
Infantry Division he coach·
ed the 2nd Brif ade Bayonets
football team to an 8-1
record 1ut season.
(AIM Cees hd
Marina Ta~2lfd
By ROGER CARUIOH Of .. ...., .........
Marina'• m1HI rela.y tum
aet a IChool record witlll a
1:31.7 cl<dini in the final
varsity event of tbe Tustln
Re,&.,a s.turday. bot still
fuuabed out ol the top five
ia the r.ce.
Thus, the VUtlngs ended
with a tecond place team
finlsb to champion Loara by
die margin ot a alhg)e point.
The Saxoos o.abbed a fov.rth
place in that final event to
bag the title. •
All of this followe d
Marina's record· breaking
t«orts '9 the long jump
wbere C2Klct Locktwt led
his b'io with a 2'l-3'11 leap.
Ken Watson helped out with
a 21-4% and R a l p h
Hernandez rounded out the
threesome with a 20-2 elforl
The ~record WM oae
of 13 set overall lll the ttiru
dlvisi<>ns of ~ ninth nm·
ning of the relays.
Other ~ marks set by
Marina came in the high
jump and 880 relay.
Bob Ci.lea, Bob Lemmon
and Keith Bergman finished
second in the high jump
with a combined total of
lW and the 880 relay team
finished second on the legs
ol Dennis McCreight, Pat
Ruf(ller, Tony Ventimiglia
and Dave Lacy.
Corona del Mar place<J se·
cond in the Cee div~ion to
Santa Aria. The Sea Kings
grabbed a first m the high
jump with a total leap of
1~-8.
Santa Ana was the overall
champion with firsts in the
Bees. Cees and a seventh
111 varsity.
Venll'Y
Sll\lttle Hurdltt-1. O.a"" 2 low-tll a. Tl4 N-Cot°"" Ml Mir 1NI Mar1~1 J. Tustin. ThM" SJ.6. (Mffl
record I. l'our Man Two-mile-I L.,.r• ?. SuMv Hilla l. Sen Clemenlt 4. Wu•·
Gymnastics
w .. 1m11111tr !Ml 1141 Cor-cltl Mar
TumbilMI: I. Mulllerln (WI ?. Mr.· COiiom (CdM) S Pa<MNI (W) l'olnlt:
IJ 1 II-Cllmblnt: 1 11111"'" (WI 1 ~ !WI 2 $Mell CWI Tlmt· 3 6 ~ H-: I. M<CoOorl\ ((.dM) 2 ,,,__ IW) J. lltti. (WI. Poln11
l.U.
HI"' hr: I. Stettler CW) 2. Ander·
toll !WI l. JoMtcWI (WI. "olnl11 U..1.
"''" E1ttrcl~j I. M<CoClom ICdMJ 2 ,edulnl l"'I J. MutMrkl CW).
,ol~ts: IS.I.
Side H-: I. Simo (WI 2. SevtMrr
(WI S. McCollom ICd"'I l"ol111t: IS I
"arallel ••n : I. lwt>On (WI 2
-(W) 3 Stenter (WI .. Mc· Hu9h IWJ. Polntt: 1.U.
...... , I. lilouUllU (Wl 2 JOllt110fl
(W) & AnclettOfl CW). l'oln19: CU.
...
HIOll .i--1. T111tlft t .... Nw
l El Mo*nl 4. O.r-. ~ l
'""'· Ol•leMt: IH. (Meet .... ). SMI ...,._I, L-CI 2. LIMI I. II
Mod-'· Santi AM 5. ~ 0.-lence: 15).4. ,_ ..-.1.
l"IM •11111-1. S.nla A11t I. 9MI a. Feot!tlll .4. MHMll• J, II ,.....
Ht!Mlt: l!M.
i..-"'--1. S...19 Me !. ~ a.
Loera 4. 'Ville ''"' J MatMl1a. oi.. tance: ... 10.... r-1 rlCMJ.
Sftultt. H.,,.._I. kftlw AM t.
Gltflfl 1 Gerdeft GrOYe 4. It MGdllle
5. Tuslln. Time: 57-4, (Mftl _.,,.
U0 ,.lay-I. Slrlle Ana J. Glt'dlt\
Grovt l. St. John IOKo. '-Tutlin a. GleM. Time· 4.U.
MtcfleY rtl•v-t. L-11 I. T111tl11 l GleM 4 Sonot1 5 Ge-Gt-owe.
Time 5.SJ.I. IM•I reclt'dl.
• relay-I. Sent• AM t. .....,.alrl venev l M•enoti. 4. GteM s. SI. JOl\n loeco. Time· I: lU (Melt ~ ordl
Milt rel1y -1. l.owelt 2. TU11f11 !
S.nl• Ana 4. GI,.... Grow S. ~.
Time l ll.4.
Final Score: Sanl• Alll Jt, 0....,
2Q, L-11 II, Tust"' 11, G•nleft o,_ IJ, Et _,.. f, Lotr• 1 ~la
'· F-taln Vallev 4 $1 .i..... loace ' l'OOllllll 1 S-a 2. Vltlt l'etk t, Trew I
CMS
Hi911 lumo-1. Cor°"" del Mat 2
V•lenclt J. ~riN '· ,Klllca 1. El
Modtna. Htl9111 IM
SIMll 11<11-1. 1.-11 2 SMt• .... l.
Coront «tel Mar 4. FOOlllHI 1. ,Kffl<a
Dltlence· 13U¥J
l'ol• ••utl-1. Santa Ana !. CWONI
clei Mar J SaddleC>Kk 4. Vallmcla J
Vtllt l"t rl'.. HetlJllt' »t. (Tift ,,,.., recontl.
Lont lumo-1. Oranet 2. Tu•lln J
TrO'( 4. Vt lencll S. Glenrl. o:.1anct:
""'"" Shullle IMJrdles-1. S.nlt AM 2 Ce>
tOfll de! M•r l SlvenM 4. l'a<fll(I
S Founttln Vallev. Tlrnt Jl.J (Meet
rte-I.
.. 1'9iaY-1. Sama Ana 2. ,Klflcl
l CCH'one clel ~r 4. Slnnna 1. of.
lflff, Tlmt· '1.J. (Meet 19Cotdl.
Medltv rellv-1. Valtftcl• ?. w .. 1.
mlMttr 1. Soni• "'"' '· Cotlt "WM S l.-11. Time 6:0U • rel•v-1. s.m. AM t. Cerone
*I Mar S. SI•_,. 4. Mirilla S. WMf.
nllMttr. Time: l::M.L I-1'9Cotdl.
Fine! kote: Sant. Ana ll, Coror11
cltl Mer 2.4, V•len<la 14 PICl#Jca '· Slvanne I, L-11 7. Ora,,.. 1, ~ rkle S. W..fn'lliistw S. Tuttlll 4 Troy
l, ~lel>edt t. C•te AillOI 2, l'OOt· 11111 2. l!!I ModeM lit. VIiie l'ert I.
11$
115
115
llS
"0Vlt'T1f tACL 1 111' "'41n J ,.., Tennis Summaries ... fllllea.AJ ___ Tll9
Sierra ~ Ola~ ff/ C-rc.t
<noltll OVC.... IA P1-.1 m
llen J!Dlll (W Htr!Mftl 1U
,,_,., Vello IJ Sellers) 1 U Sr.-SNr1tJe (l. l'lfluy Jrl m
E~ L,,_.., (J L.amlloMI Ill
l'.W Tiie -fD "'9rctl lll
llXTK llACI. • !Ur.._. ' l'Hf' ol4I end UD. Cla1Mfll9 l"ufM ....
ClalMlllf "'1Clt rl5.CICllM1SMI. n.
ArcMle e .. clleftM C""-"*°' IC!ftt Aw"' (l. l'troy Jr) 117
....... (.II ..,.,..., ll7
e.tdl O' ...... (J S.lttnl 111
•fYlt G,_,.., Cl ValtlllWll) 1'• -· ,._.._ u LamMnr 111 ...... (0 l'i.tal 117
......... llffitl (J Lambfffl 121 11--M. •• Mmer1dl IMMit ......
Coast Area Sports. Calendar
WeUet41ey
SwtmmJ.na -Uancla at
Ctr••• de l M a r,
Wtltmluter mt Newporlf
Brea at Colt.I W... l'oun·
&aJn v.u., Ill vu..u,
Maria& at Sima AM. !Ml·
_.at W..... (all et
3:11).
Tr.a LAcUu •
F oettdll ():~). '• f
o~ __ Laawold ..
at -~ (1:15). •
1MN4'T!D 6 Dl~llUTCO ...... ..,.,....co.
Wl.~aeco
,. , .
Monday, Mardi 25, 1968 DATLY PILOT Q
Baseball
Standings
Sea Kings Bow, 10·5
Mater Dei Rips Triwns, 8-
• ..... ,. s
MMl>o41e ~ Cot ... "'-, .,.. I ' CDrGN *I,,,,.,, I
htanc141 r( I FCIUfttelft v_.. ,
Val9fltl6 ' I
..... ..,~ .. -::; s ,....,... .._
L ea • • 1 1
I I
' t , ' l J , ,
Cotlt lilt .. et Cllr-. fel Mer
Fount•n VIII.., et '[lltft(lt .,,.A et lOttt
[1l1A<la at ~
llillt .....
l •Qun• l"'IC~
El M-.
M•Uk>n Vlekl
°''"" Sen C..,,_lt
Tustin Foot MM ........,..._..
l.•-J. El MocltM l
Ill"• 119111 t. 1'ttlll I
o .... It, "•"'"' J
w l ••
2 •
I I
I I
I I
I I
I 1
l 1 . ,
Mla.tltll Vltle 4 $arl Cttm...11 J .,_.,., .._
Sen Cltnwme 11 It -. l'ootlllll el Mlulorl Vlelo
VIiia l'art .. LIWUfll
~et TU&1111
Mater Det plcked up an
easy non-league bueb&ll
victory Saturday over San
Clementb, but Corona del
Mar stumbled, lotlnt a 10..S
Irvine Le.ague dee.Won to
Invading Brea.
Mater Del wra,>ped up ita
make-up win over the boat
Tritons with a four-nan ex·
ploaJion in tM second inning
aod then coasted home wltb
four 1 t r a i c b l singlH"UJl
Crames to take an M
verdict.
Wayne Schrader went all
the way for the Monarchs.
allowloi only four hits for
the will.
LarTy Gable had a double
for «i.e winners for the only
extra base hit.
Corona wasn't so
fW'blftate. The Sea Kings'
make-up game with Brea
<after a 2-2 tie earlier) was
a disuter with ~ first two
startlog pitobera ailing.
Ace Bob Coot.ant w•• sick
enne.,1·
IMrO •• ·-
and S~ Leech, with a sore
arm, was passed by as a
starter.
Seven runs resulted in the
third inning for the Wlldcat.s
on three sincles, 8JI error.
two walkJ and a two-run
homer.
Leeoch finally came in and
worked the final four in·
nlngs and came through
with a fine job . . . a.llowl.ng
only two runs in tile seventh.
Rex Syoder doubled for
the only extra·bue-h.it for
Coroaa. ._....,, .......
I If I
11,..• II 1 IOO 1-10 IJ I
C...-al-00.Sll~S 7 I C... ... MM(SI
T~r. If
II. SllY<ltr. a
M.-t." Alli-. lb
llalldtl, • ............ rf
WllbrKl!t, d O..nrr,111
0 SllY<ltr. c
leec:ll ••
Tol•lt
ICoel>Nr,u
Al • If HI J I I I
l I J I
• • ' 0
' 0 0 • , 1 , •
I t 0 e
2 l • •
I t I I , 2 t ,
2 • • • t7 s 1 •
•-Cltl Al ...... • • , t
NQt10fl, (1
n.o.--.111
ltrrtlj, '
$1\l-.tt
J ... -." a.ford, lb
ludr.-. 3b o ... -,....
Totals . " . Maler Del tiO Ill l-1 I I
Sin Clemente ooo 004 ~ • 2 Matw Del Ill
II ll,.Mr1, If w ...... c
Muflel, lb
""""'" lb l.•'•"· Jl>.p Wtrblft11lofl. u
Wllllernt Cf "-"·" klll'Mhr, •
A& II Hiii ..
t 1 ' ' t t I 1 ' . . . t • • • s t t I
4 I I 1 t t J •
: : : l
I I t t , . ' . I t t t
• 1 • 1
1 • • •
Santy, Cf
~~,.. lll
Ha.W, lb
MCK-." s-...
roi.11 • • • • SH ClllMlltl W
l..omlNlrdl, C1
l'flttl!I, lb
OuMlc ••
Hamtlloll. ti
Jona&. c on..a. 2" Ja111<1n. ri S.,.,.,,.._,,, I
seon. • Dl1man1. "
TO!eb
u ......
I I t e , ' ' -J • • 1 , • 1 • , . . .
' • 1 • t 1 • •
2 1 • •
t • e •
I I I t
ti ' ' '
NOi' AN OYRIWl.I
Re-po~er your car with a
foremost~Remanufactured engine!
Don't take~°" o lllOtot' job ot • overhouMd eft(line. Get a c., 1 II .......
'llfith ...w ports ot parts that ore reW1a11wfoclW1ed to precilioft tol8l'ICIM9.
HERl'S WHAT YOU GET WTTH A PINNEY INGfNI:
• lrand new valves, 9 uidM, lik en, vain roctiers, pwshrod1
• lra nd new pistons, rings, and wrist pin•
• Blocks are magnafluxed and preuvre tested te attUN perfection
• lloclta ...-ec1 to precisiott factory tolerances
• All new main ond rod 1t-rin91 ancl bushings '57·'62 OtewDJ.t 213, ftef,ange
• Cranklftoft ond ca mshaft r~round to precision to .. rancea Mott A1Hri<att engin.s ot similM J.w,,,....
NO DOWN .. AYMENT ••• USE P'ENNfYS' TIME "AYMENT Pt.AN
1·2-3 WBE SPECIAL
1. Contplete chaasis I.be
2. New.on filter
3. OH chcH•9• (5 ~ IL D.)
ONLY ••• 4.44
Don't miu the free
Pit lou lnlpection
·~ ....
..... I • . .,... .....
....... fl f F .,.... ... . ...., .....
HAVE YOUR CAR ACTION -TESTED AT PEN NEY 'S
NEW SCIENTIFIC TEST CENTER .. 712 CHECK S ... 9.88 1
............ ... . .,.,. ...
mT .... ,_., M,_......._.
........... l1
Jf DAil Y PILOT
, ..... Gear
Chevelle
Sporting
New Lines
81 Cil.L CARB'l'ENBFJf ne new Cbevrolet
Corvette .... without •
doubt, tba newe.t looldDI ct tbe ma modek when
io.trodo'*1 lalt tall. It 1Ull
draws the atra 1uu but
it ii the Inter me dla ti
Cbeftlle line tbat b I I
redicallJ changed for 1988.
It bu an all-new bod7
CO!lltruetlon for the flnt
time lince ita introduction
In ltM. There II alJO more
window 1ia91 DOW and
Chevelle b.u two diltinct
wheelbase aiua -118 Inch·
a for tedana and station
wagons and 112 incbH for
coapn and convl!l'tiblet.
~-.. ...
. .
be. Optiom aft11ab1e .. llustai. 2 .PbdMdbl -
abundant. A& we I ·a t d Barrac:ada llid Va 1 i a at ,
before, the "plain" u.m. Javell.n. twCMioor !wdf.op WU a Clllll C (lnt.-mdate pleuant surpriM • • • A
1ooctf amlly automobllt. •• •) : J'ont J' a lr 1 a .a • .• Mercury Monte10, * * * Plymouth Bal v t de, • ,
ENTIUF.I a.oa CbeveJJe.
FOB MOBIL R\JN a... D (lntmnedi.ate
Aa ID all the in1mnediata
GM I1Des th1I year, Qievelle
empbulu1 the Ione hood, A symbolic key presentation today marked the of· short deck design. The in·
tidal ~I of Willbire Yeder.11 Savina' aew of· termedtate c1ul ii wlwe
Forty-one o1 America's · 1'1): Balck SOtda1. rord
newett puaen1• can ., Torino, Cbneti. Malitiu.
officially entwed In UM -OlclJ , .... Men:ary Moo-
Mobll Run, acclriing to .ut• tego. PlymoutJa Belv.-..
Rene, chief ltenrd fat aa. Dodge Coronet, P o 1l t t a c
event. Tempest
flee located at 1883 Newport Bl•d.. COsta Mea. the 1ale1 actio& ts and the Tbe ftul entry lilt 11 a ClMI E Oow pl1ee 1'1):
crON section of the .... 2 CbevrOl9ta -Impala ud
lnd:Ultry's most p o pat a r Caprice. Pord C • • to m ,
moclell with all four..,.. Plymouth f'urt.
Tak.in& part are Oe:ft to rfght) Willard T. Jordan, 118 Chevelle with 14 modelJ
mayor of c.o.ta Keaa; W. T. '"Ted" Beresford, man-In four series should con·
ager of the Q>lta Meu olfice, and Cllf ford R. Kau, ti1111e to be the sales leader
uecattY• Tice pmideat of Wihhire Federal BIY· bl ltl cl.us. man ........ ,,........ a... r (mtd!am prtce
ID aumben, G e • er al 8's): 2 Oldamobllea -f>illta llotGn btldl .... ~ • and Dlimoat ...... lll'lml"Jl'UP9
wWI 17 flltriel; Cbr)'IJer ii Mont.rf)', I)od.. Polan,
next with 12; fODowed by CbrJllter Newport. Balck
J'ord with 10. Leut ID IASatre, Poatiac Ca•Hna.
DUJDl)cw, but alwa11 a coa-a.. G ()aury Qf'I): 2
tada-, ii American Mollon, Oldl!nobOea -• a D d
nlJiDI on only 2 can.
inp at Los Angeles. J'lnt sJ.ance at t b • Cbn•Dt Malibu two.door
lwdt.op will tell you tbat
• • GM ttyu.ta w o r k e d New Bank Given Approval .~~,,..~
The Federal R e 1 e r • t
Board bu approved Wtn.
Fargo Bank's application to
e1tabll1b a banking boUN
1n Santa Ana.
tlom Mid the 8Ctklll ,. ....
U. "'1 for cam...-al
.,. ....... for a lai&IW.
Joc.uon for tbt o f fl c •
qurtm.
popallr 88 • wttll aD the
performanc. optlom IO ft
Mledtd tbe '"ntabt" Malib9
blrdtop wltb t'b;;:b Mita"
-~· .... anv.a nlcb bM P'Oft trom the
fa!ibfU1 -
OC Buildup
I,imits PSA Jolin R. Breeden, G•
ecutive vice president la
charge of the b a a k ' I
Southern California oplr6'
s. added .. tbe .....
apecfl to opm the ...
bradl "' .. tad ,,, ...
J'Ul•
.:r~ .::m:=r= CODditlGablC U HI oalJ IX·
tru and ... mt•• and
'nll"Mflrst·Y••rpro.
dllcUoD can are entered.
They _.. the M e r c a r 1
Moa.tqo, Ford TorhM>. and
AMC'1 new Javelin. The futett run ever, w l t b
drtYtn required to maintain
• better than 54 mpb Net Income avsrage on th• five-and·a·
Walter Winchell . says:
~ ''Clleek Es~ ...... Oil' ~
-die ... tJlat ..,. ..... ,.. ....
'
. l. -ta0a ,.. wta •r• ire a 1111111 If a ) .... , ..
~'IODAY!
·. EXECU'rIVE
CAa. J.•.A.811f0 COM~.ANYtt •• 0.-.. c:...,
Kl 7.J011
Pll'fmw ... aceDeat Jt ,._ a piMHat IUrPrlM
to hd tbe .,, ..... mort
tbla adlctutt for tbe car.
Tbl Mlllba equfpptd u
IDdl .. not for the ••en-
tlmatut" In te11D4 0 f
perfGrmanee but I t J Jl D ' r: It DUI' tbe top of tbe
fttnca note: Olem>let eou1d UM a thrlHpeed automatic vn mott modela
instead of the older two
speed. Noise lnsulallon in
the Malibu hardtop was ex·
cellent. It'• an euy car to
get in and oat of and bench
seat.I give you room for six.
BaodlfD1 wu as Jt 1bouJd
balf-4ay trek from Ora.nae
County to Times Square,
tldt year' 1 3000 mile route
cner'I terrain from IN
level to a two-mile biCb PUI
ill the Colorado Roctiea.
Grouped Into I I V e D
clu'" accordbl1 to me,
bar•pow• .. price, e-
triel an:
a.t A (compact l'a):
Dodp Dmt. 2 Plymoatha
-Valiut ud BG'ncada,
2 l'ordl -lakon and
Muatua, Rambler Rotue,
Corvalr.
ClaU B (compact S't):
Chevz ll Nova , 1' o r d
EQUITY FUNDING CORPORATION
of AMERICA and its Subsidiaries.
Equity Securities Corporation
North American Equity Corporation
Equity Casualty Insurance Agency
Presidential life Insurance Co.
of America
Equity Growth Fund
Equity leasing Corporation
Equity funding Service Corporation
You can 11m lliltantial llditional income on a part time basis
while you kaap ~ prmnt jab I •
EQUrrY FUNDING~ of Anwica, a Mtlorwl flnancill COnclfft with
............. proWlng ~ financiet ......... wldng • number of
new r1pn1111111• men of hiah chncter and mature JudgrMnt. to meet the 1961
explftlion p&w. W. provide U. necnurv DfOf-'onll training far ltcenaing Ind
NgllbMlcwt wllh the NldoMI Aaloclelion "of 8ecuritiel D11l1r1 and the lnlUrlla
Commltelon. EQUITY SECURmES Corporation on.. qu1lifled men and women
an unUIUal opportunity ••• 1 chance to fllm the potential of 1 moet l'IWlrdlng end
utisfying ClfW. You will work with iwtment compenitl worth billionl of dollera
"' mlNlltd -. and you will en;oy the preltige of :•nndng a ~ flmOUI compeny. Aa an ESC man your income wttr be • • Vo" w.t to.,,...
it, WOtttJnri your own hours • your own boa. A new witl of training ••kn ii
about to~ Ind If thil IOUndl fnteewting to you .•• and ~'d likt to ICQUA pa.1rana1 lkill in financial 11111. we'd likt to talk with you. Thia could d\lnge
YoUr entire .. fOt the b9tttt.
l1MT A MW• MWAllDINI WIER wmt A
NAnOUI. PBllll COMPANY
FREE EDUCATIONAL AND SALES TIAININC
PROS RAii W. Pay Your SecUfltiel + Insurance Tuition r••• STOCKS• DDl• IUIUAI. fUIDI • ~
DUii ConvnillloM Can Gt'*ltl Rtelly High
~
Paclfic Souillwest Airllnea
carried 272,107 puaenaer•
durinc FebruarJ, a 2S ..-
cent lnereue onr tbl ume
period tut year, &DDOaDCld
PSA i>r.ident J. '1oyd
Andrft'I. PSA ~ntooalJ
reported a aimilar ~
tai• lncnue fer JaDUl'J uea. ·-
In aaaouncl•I tll4a
P'ebraary trafftc fl&area,
Andrtwl • t • t • d that
altlloqb tr.me •olmnt ii
up ov• last .,._, Mt tn..
COJM in the flnt quarter
fftm 11r11ne .,,.. ... wm
be Wei' 1haa PSA'• tint
qurl8r lut ,ur. Ht G•
plmnld ihat.tbia 1• • nnlt
ol 1Derw1d eoltl for op11a-tlODI and ~ and ... te ........ and
facilttin buildup for the an-
tldpated l'OUtel f r o m
Orang• County Airport and
Ontario to San FrlllCUco.
Appllcatio111 fer t b • 1 e
routea have hem on fiJa with
tbe Califonda p u b lJ c
Utllltlel Oommllllon, but
.. roata. bave not been ~-yet. !'SA .. curreatJy pbulna
out itl elder and men COIGy
Lockheed Electra fleet and
ha• added the new ts.
pauenger BoelDI 72MllO
aircraft to Its c q r r • n t routes.
WtlUAlllll•l&J••flr•11t1f1ill.....,,...
HOW WELL DO
llUTUAL FUNDS
PERFORM?
N~BEACH
WEDNESDAY-MARCH 27
GoodboctJ & Co.
, 4501 Birch Strlet
(edjlon to Ora,.. County Airport)
• ~ .. llCW tir. •
PMA. llOWMH
-~
Mutual
Fonds
. .
.,. ,,,. -· ~ -·
Monday's Closing ~ Pric~ -Coniplete -New
•
·York
•
. .. .. . . . -.
Stock Exchange List ... ....
0.,) "'* "'-c .... e-..
Stock
•
... -... '.. . . .....
IWLY '1LOT J5
aosing
. --
,., '· ' '. '. .. . . .. .. ' . . ,. ., '\ ..... , . ' . . . ' .....
r
Ope.n Forum
This Is the ancient Roman Forum and that "column"
you see in the foreground is your . own DAILY PILOT.
We've come a long way since the days when Caesar's
citizens debated their most important affairs amid the
columns you see In this photograph. It was q u lte a
marketplace, too, a place where you could find the
best goods and foods of the day. Ideas flourished, too,
In that a~lent Roman FoNm.
t • • t
l..,"6-• ..... -~ ......................... ~, ... .... . .... ... ._ .. .,.....-......-
•
•
, -
t . ,
...... , ...
BUt Orange Coast readers know there Is an "open fol'-
um" much . closer to home nowadays. No need to traY-
, el to Rome. The most important affairs of the world,
.. the nation and the local communify are reported and
debated among the colurnns of the DAILY PILOT., Ahd
the Orange Coast's favorite daily. newspaper Is ~ pop. • • • ular marketplace, too. look · amid. our colu.rnna for foit
clay' I best buys. " . . ..
.. ,_ ' ~ • .. • f"' • • .--~· .. ,. • # r • I '°) I I• I• I . I I • •. • • • • • • .-...... • •" ••• t r • ... tfll
• ; llO'Ttc• .., ~ ..... ·ueas Won't C~pture Kile Sanh ~~~~
CERTAIN DEP'EAT
"I certllaly 1NUJd not
favar ~ ii caDed the u-
dave ltratety," be uJd. "I
tblDk that 11 tlntlmowd to
certain defe.t. ..
-CCIDCflded tbe Ollmmu-
nlat Water olf.eutv• re~ tered &bocb to tbe allied
CUM IDI! dealt "a tetback
to JDaQf ~~ pstlcularlJ Cbt pacUlca procram ... -rarecut that m the tone
f\Ql tbt net effect of that ol·
fuatve ''wtll be favora!U
to ua" becwe of Commu-
nilt violence apiDlt Vie~
ume• clYWana.
The comm1Mant, Who baa
beeD MeJ>))' lnvolwd ID Id· m.tnlltratlon 41 1 c u 1 aiou
flVf/r policy, refuad COID•
ment on the posaible ICOPt
ol a new bulldap ar whether
it will HCell1tat.I a ruerve
cailqp.
AVOIDS COMMENT
He allo ~ com· mat on Cbe e impact
on &be coane of the war of
tbe prelidential eampa1gJll
ol Sena. Robert F. Kennedy,
(D-N.Y.), and Euae11e Mc-
Carthy, (D-Minn. ), both foes
of present war policy.
Here are tome ot the
q~ aocl amwen ~m
Cllapmen'• inter'riew:
Q. We've read reporta that
the enemy lw been closing
Classified
HOUSH FOR SALi HOUSIS ,OR SALi!
Generaf i.. Oenenl 1000
Newport ••• c11
SUrn:RJ!l'C "°' .
DREAMS!
'I1Mn !Mn's '1flllr dr9m come
trut. ZIOO 911. fl cl l8l'p
bednww, a )lap muter .mw. formal dlntllC area, ternzo entry ball. mnpaa
room wttb wet b9r, and ~
feaiona1 1anddllPlnl wt1h
aublmatlc ~ Just
reduced to "'IJJJ.
SPAR.KLING lJGHTS
An 70U 1oold:nl b a futd-
tic view of ~ "8.y. Ucbta
.. Catalina &laud? Are
JO'I looldlW tar • borne
wldda II sr-t b .,_..
tddrll end at. an ltteel
tul1lJ .... wtfll tt'• I.up
mmp1.1 room IDlt room lair
• .,.., ,... .. tb1a 3000
... ft.. 4 Bil nDdl 1lome.
ODIJ ... with. low down
tQUMfllt.
...... SPRING ,.,REATil'V
JD Watdlft Drive
6 HOUIS
$36,IOO
(lllilr ......... ID:clw
)lVlN011 "25 ... ~
*a.cm OUTS*
Ocea11 View Homes
NIAR IEACH
...... ,. ttepoe .... i.n.
30 yeer loeiw • ~~ llltet'8L
wttti payments onl7 sm.so
Pill per montl1 on a $34.SOO
bome. z.., Unanclnc.
No Sc.II co.ti or e&cl'OW
lees. Larp 3 • 4 BR Jll"D' tiae homee. 3 baths, mar·
ble pullmam, choke ol col·
f# In caJ1>ettnl. Ovenlud
2 CU' l'lft¥el, built·ln OV·
...., ftDlrl!ll a dl8bwuben.
Low low dn. <n«> ...
RJtr. s..39211 Eves. &G-0:18.i omc. Opet Sat/Sunday
*LACHENMYER
Home & lusineu
Combination
ON W. 1tTH Bl'REET
4 BR • 1~ batbl 2 ca•·
pnp fadJ:IC lltreet. Tr)'
Slt,l!OO, ~ dn (ft r ml.
Priold tor qmdr ale. Nev·
fit qallll tor ~ prop-
erty.
Ledrhatt A.odatet
561 w. l9tb. c.M.
548-2301 645-332'l
$195 MOVI IN
a BR. s BA. ...,,.... dnlpes.
blt.tm.tence:S•lank:..S.
Neu 11A:7 Co. Broker ..,_or 56aGI
llUlllifi ........... " eon. Tlllt DAILT PIIDr a • ..,,., ..-., !aft ..., .......... ..-
...irr
INSTANT TRADE
..
Move Ritht In-We'll Buy
Your Hom• Under our New
&UUl1B Bdl 1UDE NII
DONE A LOT
I will NJ tills. We ha" done a kit. I mite refennee
to a. bomMnc and et'tlllery are. It Ml been jwlt
encn:moua up around '*8.
Our support ol that outpost
mq be compll'e4 to IODl8
Of tbt beavh1t bom-
bard.menta '11 World War II
In t.rms ol quantity ol
..., .. dropped and fired.
Q. And yet they do eeem
to be cloaint In on tbe
perimeter.
A. Tbey haven't muaed
7et. They b.avt to IDUI
Wore tbeJ CID ... lull And
when 1be7 inu1, they are
fair pme.
Q. What ts the current
estimate ol North Vletr
ume1e lt:renitb 1n tbt arta
threateninl JQie SUb?
A. You aee fl I qr e 1 anJ"ll'f>e're from 15,000 to
50,000. The Jiuter numbers
are thrOQCbout tbt whole DMZ area and don't directly
threaten Khe Sanh. Right
around Kbe Sanb rve seen
tliUJ'H from llbolJt 15,000
to 25,000. 'Ibe tmprelSlon
given that there are 15,000
to 25,000 people doughnutted
right lll'OUDd Khe Sanh is
limply not 10. 'Ibey ar. not
massed. They are 1cattered
tn iroups ot i. 3, 5 or 10
in and around thOM bllll.
If they ever do meas, 11
I My ..•
REAL 'l'llREAT
Q. Bow about tbe tun·
nellngT Does this repreMnt
a rttl eire.n We've bad
repor11 they come very
close 1o ~ wire ud to
the airstrip. Do you suppose
thla is Intended to JnPll9
for demolition ar aaatult?
A. U that'• what tbeJ are
, I~*--~--1
-. ~···· 0-.... ...... betll to Vietnam, bavt ~ =· ~ ........
... ...... -to twtl bead C*'taba Arm.7 omc.r. ;:;-.. ~-.::, .:: =-" :r. .......... ;;~ ~~... crtUcla 1llariM tactica ad~ ~t ~ ~ •• ,. -~ -................. °"'. mlDlfltldl W ... • tU metboda. What ii your """"" ..... ~ • °"111119> """ ~ ot ~ .a· 1'9PLIJ to 1uch atUc.lam o1" ~..,,.. • ::'..., bloW !t 1IP _ ,. *" a the Corpl' performanct? :r:"C:.f ~ ~ ~ ':..:
I ............. ci.ir .......... Pf. A. Wtll. the crttlct a r t • 4f;
Q. Wbat., w clO ~ te1 anonymou. The people Wbo 4"'9" ti:~ ~ ... " .:
ceetblue tD tmmelt 'WMt l.f9 willlnl to come up on tht «ll'f " ·~ l:..,--'t t1 .,. .,. c1olba to COWltlf line and ldenttfy themaelve• ="" ,..:=. 'it .... , .,::. ,,.,
tbla? ll'1 ft11U1 not cllar. atall8 exactly the oppoettlt. : ~--~: ... ..,... A. To my _,,._ Gen. Weatmoreland just re-.. AActi. tt .,... , ..., ~ :"'L
then la DO~ e'914Mce cenUy, becauae 01the1tor-::. ~--=..,-:=. = =-that tMJ 8l't ta fact lei, Hid that be had com. t# ~ .... \ ~ •
!h!f,. Wt J y t . 'ltt plete COnfldence In GtJl, rr .. -.r:=:: t = 1. ': ~ from ~ Cushman and e~ Marine .,.._ " ... ....., -*" " llM
rodl to ~ out down to the lowest private. ~en 1. ,_, "'""' " ..... u.-. 1r'1nc to ~ So, I jlllt don't pay JllY at-: ~ ,_~ L . ~
whether ar not they ll'f tu&-tention to anybod,y who J'6-:r . ..,_,... -..... 111 ~ nellilf. fuse1 to identify hlmaelf. .....~.= :": :_ ~
u " did detect aad ... Q. One of the fairly conala-= ':,,::' ~ "r .;., .. .:=
nn --~ a tent theme• that some of u.1 • ...._, ....,I have .. __ _. 1 .... __ , __ ""·t ~ f/I .. .....,MCllM fl 1119
~· m a \oCa. uc.nl w ""9 ~ -·'"-'' " ,,....... " • 11ne .___ 1 ......_, ..__ --•1w the Marines l.f9 1tructured ..,., ,..,_ ,._ -. """' ''"'
-· -IUNW _...., f blb1··~ eM M11! ..... rty 1M9 .,, I.ft • Ill what the c o in m a a d • r 1 or amp &Uua warfare and •• • " CAMI ...-.. .._,
would do about Jt -bul thatrlnt th~ eqalpmeot, doc-t ="'l ,,..•,:: .. i:, =-~
I ean uaure you tbtJ would e 1111\1 tactlca are n o "' 1tt tMce " ... ~
do eomethtoc. TheJ coU1f suited to poaJUOn warfare L ": ~"'-,--: =v -:~ count. wUb -tolhel * Hke at Khe Sanb. ........... 'et"" •• ,...... ~. --r IOUt !Mt .. .-.. .. 4MICI' ... cUg their own abaft. A. Tbere'1 really no ~ "' ... ....-OdlW w. "" Q. U lt II bl tbelr-bdle stance to that. An outftt ::.n.i--12~r.,..•..,oe.•--:
plan tb overrun Ebe 8aDb tbatt1 Ol'Janized, tnlned and •'-Mid .,,.. ... ..,, .i••••""'
-w}\y have tbty wilted equipped to uaault a beavt-:.C~ w:i·~ •°',ft "': = thh lo"• wben the watber ly detended beach can do 111 111e °"' "' N"'°" le9dl. ~ ... t ........ t' ~ .. , ...... "° ..... Wu ID their fa\'Ot'! And now moa an,.......... Tha 1 the is. Ofllclel ._.. ..kl .,....,..,
they are lo•1•• that ad· toughest Job there .la -real-'"" ~ • -~ •••tr ..... ... 119¥ • redllll ti ....... ...,, vantare. 1Y-selle wartere. It re-• tVlll 1 ,,_ •Id ,.,,,. .... "
&II 'W• IWw.I" Y e1ont .Cd .,....,,, IN fll .. leM A. I doa't '-o-•1•"-q~a all the bN~w..-Seut11 .,. tr "" • ..,, t11e11CJ1 ~
they nevtr reell1 tnteQded ODS, all the heavy Oii IUp. ti !ht CltY "' N_, 8tldl. tlll"llUrll
to do It -man7 of us haft port. allot the dJrtieet kind ~ ~ *: .. ,&S~• ';..."',. :" .,.
never believed. that lt Wll ot flghting-<:Joee tn flib~ '"'"' wt11c11 • ,., .. , lfM •n =:, .... _._ -'th fl ..__ u-c-sr ••1 llllMlt '""" •· certain that that wu u.JS wJ ame '°'.,...... "" ... ww. ,... ,... ;-,. ..w
lntent1on . -or e1le U:. satchel cbarfel, macth ::-' ,.~ :,. ~ ~' -.: tremendoua amount o f g\ma and the !mvielt kind • -_... -'-'Y .. 11ev1ne bombs and artillery ftre ot fire 1Upporl. ~ ~ ",::ua..=,-: = we've lald on bu jUlt The tdea that we are llibt· • c:.11n1 _.. °' r If' ar .,.
de1-yed them. I tb1nt Trrrf Jy equipped and lightly arm· =111 '::'; ... ,:.. "'• • • ,.
likely that may be Qt ed which I've also read lJ EXCEPT .,., -'""' "'-""" lnclUOlcl . ' ..... F'We'f•-reuon. We've cllarupted and certainly not true. We're ALSO iexc1,r itt ...,.,.._, .n. dela..-them equipnad and arm-A for Mfllr•I , .. •rid ~ mrlHll ,.._ • I"' 11:\l .,.,.,,_, ...... Ill W ~ Mid
Q. Don't yo11 ~ tbe heavy combat. 1an11 or 1hlt ....,, • ,..,.,_..
Ccmmuniltl ma7 a1read1 Q. I Corps used to be call· ~ ~11 ._rl911V:: ~
have accompl.labed 1rbat ed "Marineland." By de· « MN 1MC1 1n 111e e.-ciee " •kl .... _ t ut to d ... _ Ann ,,.,,., etc,, • ,..... "" "" ...., Uff;y se o o up u..• greet m~ end more y "°"' kllll*'ll "ecNlc '°"'"""' ,_.
-forced us to conCCJtrabl troo~ came up And then ., J,,_,., "· tt47 "' ._ "" r • •• -• •· Offlclel "-*· troops in the northern pro-the recent appointment of """Cl!L (; Tiit' ""'°" " ui.
vtrlce1, and tbU1 taktn tbese Army Lt. Gen. William ! ::..i.1 ..:.. ~°"w•t~ r,:ne:.~
~• away from the •ar Rosson to a major commmd a-.n11no Merldlen. 1n ttie d'Y et
f ._..... fr ..._ th h t..--vi ed N~ ·-· G:lllllfY qi Or.1111•• er IOuYJ -om UJe ere as ...:en ew a1 a ..... " c.ii1on111. ~,,. ,. an
and C • n tr a 1 reflection of dlssatlatactton Offtc1a1 Plet "' Nfd ...-""" '" Ille 0111rlct lAnd ~. All9Ull ~. 1 ateut with Marine performance. ,.,., e1es<rlllld .. 1otiow.:
works two waya. lt'• A. I've read that. There .!:',';"~ " t11e ~ ':..::
true we've tot abablt forct• Is no substance to that el th· 11,.. "' Lot ~lock 02 "' can••
cencentrated up there, but er. The Marines from me ~ .. ,..,.. '":=.:::. "'J::.
IO bave they. Yo11 know, right on down strongly 1up. '" ... off\(.9 "' "-«*llllY -*' I t L'--h d M Id Cl14lf(ty' Wllll Ille ......., we ve go S,000 at Kbe OtlU port the crtation of that pro-,.,.. 1o .,. """ " "' " ..,.
and the l6att number of vWonal corpt headquarters, ='.::"'..J'~"' ,.::~ = their troop1 we've beard are and the Installation of Gen. 111 -. ,._.... OcMer" t4 1m.
around Kbt Sanh ii 15,000. Rouon there. ~-= :: ..... l:,,. "• o;:.'~
Th• questlot ii: who ii tytna That job haa juat gotten , ... 111 ""'.::"!-, ...._ ..,.
down wbo? too damn big for one bead· : :!, ~·00 teet .!.'°':
Q. Most reporter• In-wuarters down at Danang. t11e -nn. "' ~°tr• _.
' ... antlr ... ., ""*" ·-.. d\141na m71elf, who bne had to be subdivided. ... ....,., n... ., ,.._, ..._ t
•
DAILY PILOT
ttil, fAST
Wiie .... ,.. ........ .. ................ ,ca... ..... . re ......... A. DAILY ""°'·
, ... -. ·---. ..... ........... ' '. . .. . .. . .... ' ....
New In Baycrest
J pt D'lll'OuC'ed to the IDM'-
ket. trlta 1paciaua, IWC'Unous
family ~ ahoo1d pleue
Sell or Tracie
~ m01Jt d!scrunina~ of EvK-Call S40-663'l
tutrs • Big bedrooms, :l ii-miiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio
We bave a tremendous ll)o
flux of buyers from our
other oUicf'I, 19 m all &. m·
vestment dlviAion. Wt nl.'t'd
houses A income units in
the c.o.11 Mesa, NewpOrl,
Htmtington Beach •-"'a. If
you are dunlang of sellmg
or tradinr up or down. gi•t
ua 11 call, wt have I.be ana.
wen. FREE appraisal~.
bat.M. FORMAL DINING
ROOM, ~ti' famil y
room, and aeiparalt wort
&hop, bobby room or oCb.
~autffully manicuttd yard
with room for a m~ pool.
Exclulive wttb Wa!Ur i
Ltt
IAYFRONT
& VIEW
PROPERTIES
Arctul«i deslined Jge. rooms
lim~-~to ....
• .............. ••••• $59,500.
Souinr cathedral ~ii. Exe. 293 E. 17th st. 646-4494
Area. V~ . • · · • • • • $19.500 Sile « LeH e Option ~ *3 \llESTC1.JFF DRfVE BAY .Ir oc.T.AN VlEW 1.an-
~ml ~ Evn. fti A Custom Pool. 8Plow
Mes. del Mar S.crifice
Spacious 4 bedroom • 2.lm
l!QU&tt toot lovriy with abal<r
root, ~ buitt-tn. $29,960
boys wtttl JO'r,. down or
LH8I' with option to Bu:Y.
<Mt of lawn owner must cti.
poee. Vacant by April lat.
It's The Most
Be-au t.ltul OUlltOm vinyl ..rtr:Y
leada ~ Into lhll ct.rrmng
4 bfdroom Mesa VtrdP fam..
lly ·ber:ne. Built· In electrk
tit~n adJotna the c:wtom
lllhuttn-ed family r o o m.
La11ie rte!' yard hu ltCCUI
for trailer ar boet. Newly
painted exterior. Priord at
$2>.500. This la the belt buy
on the maricet.
Colesworlhy & Co.
'42-nn
1 !!0t Hartxr BlYd., C.M.
~ Ew9.
iohn macnab
A HANDSOME
·FORMAL
-VieW Home cl
diat1nction. Le~
uvtng nn, • Bdrm.
Dining nn i Family rm.
.• -]hown by IJIPl.
CaJI for Appt.
'42-8235
PrJce ReducM
& thia I.& a .. ...,,_ ..
too. ~)' d!'cloraNd
C08t • • • • • • • • • • . . • • • • S72.lm
32 IT. ON WATER. (\1stnm
ho~. l&rlr doc'k. Not 1.#Uf
Hold .......... ' ... $115,lm
Mary Harwy
c.w..a, .... & c.. ~ D9 LC-........, .._.,--...ea....,..
IONml 01..._.
.......... -......__, m>TA MlBA OFF1CE
-El9~Btvd.
%414 VIiia Del Oro
Newport Beech
)fl4 Via Dd. Oro
Newpcwt semi
CONDOMINIUM
I BR, l be., all on groond
~. dbl sar 1eec doer)
Localled on ~ roll-
lfti ~.
Er\joy 'YOll frft tm..
1001" yud ~. 1llm ~
cl.~bome.
Call for ""'1s. f'tc.
, ... 644-1133
56-9491 ()pm till 9 PM
ITAUAN
RESTAURANT
Indudinr bu.me., ~ tnr A C2 lot. &abmit your
tenn.s.
$32,500
Slaslaine Specills
TWO 3 BR l bath hornet -
1 wtth ow.I pool. Take your
choice • both vacwit l
rMd)' for accuplnCJ'.
$l9,fSO & $21,950
Jarie Me. V«de cam. S HOUSES
bridge home with DflW drap.
ea A. new carpets, • v • n S POOLS
In bftthroom1 It ololra. Now 5 PRICES
dropped to S31..D on •• L 4 Bedroom with l>Nutlful
lest of terms. landlcaplnc and ~ ~-
Coll• RHlty S44-5llO erect pa&. $23,900.
1z==~m==-=· '· s bedroom. l8rre tnclc.d
GARDEN SPOT s. r=· wttb Cl'ftn
$2,450
Down on .._ tpllt lrvrl w/
buem't; • BR.. 21~ bl.
2800 aq. ft. al llv. !pace.
Part .Ir acbl. \.a hilt. away
with 1 var1cl)' of fruit trMs.
Well built 2 BR home, la'rge
llltchm, hardwood Doon,
doabte raraae. Convenient ioc:att«i. m. '7!I(). good tsma.
Wella-McCardle Rltrs.
l!M Newport Blvd., C.~L
~ m!t EYes. &44-0884
DAVIDSON Realty
BliAUTIFULL Y
LANDSCAPED
lmnw:. N.8. 3 BR +-din-
nig. 1 "'I bath. hardwood
floora.
Rltr 2150 Hari>tlr '18. CM
54&~!60 £\"t!S. 673-1164
3-BR -f AMtl Y RM:
$21,~00 No Down G.I.
2 hllth U!W'd bric.it firepla<"f'.
Built~ kllrllen. Pat.lo Room
tor bolu « trailer ~liJO
TARBa.L 2956 Hart>or Blvd
PRIYATE PARTY
house and 3 car prap.
$32,IXXl.
4. 3 bedroom .Ir family room,
new wall to .....n carpet-
ing. $32,500.
5. 1 bedroom + den, S baths,
tmnal dininr room $40,500.
2m E. 17th St. 646-4494
Eveninirw &46-3259
5 leclrooms
$23,950
Only S.19,960
DELTA REAL ESTATE
64S-4414 962-3387
S Bdrm Single Story
Custom colonial, bnmd new
with rust eold abag crui>el·
Ina tbru~. Fabulous floor
plan and 1 3 • car garage.
Walk to irolf 1 n d tmnis'
S'M,950. MESA V E R D E
REALTY~
1-lt'tt i., M ex~l\ent li1uatitln !!B!!Y!!OW!!!!!N!!ER!!!!.!!N!!ear!!!!We!!!!st!!clill!lt.
tor 1 larit family wbo wonld
la. t ...._ I l ... ,__..~ shopping. 3 Bdrm home, .... o .,... on Y """""" Jarie llvino with fireplace, from CBtbolk: Church ftnd • school. Built-in kitchen. fam-dlnin& area, new built-In
Uy room. l bfttha, and n~ kltcbeo with bircb cabinets,
aiu yud f« the k.ida to new FA fU.rnac-.. Larie lot
pla.y Anunv ~law,~,.... • ~. with block walll.
GI loan and S169. lncl.ud8 _m_.<m_. _642_-_TOOT ___ _
pin<'lpll), interl'!ll, taxrs and Near Beach, Salton Sea
will ixirttiaae home or ID-tnsurancr Best loc .. xlnt R-1 lot May
corne property if dea1fabJ,.. ~ trade for truck, late car
• or -1ubr1111 what YOU
PRINCIPALS ONLY. 642-7116 hnt. A.skin1t SJ.250 642..JSB9
8A Yl'RONT i doclt. Mab 1 MANY 1'0Nt>ERnJI. OP.
ol~t. 3 BR. 3 Be., den. I 20t3 WESTCLIFF" DlUVE PORTlJN1TIES llaYe beta
fOr k!ue I opt. $425 Mo ' 646-mt 0pm Eves. d.ilcovered In Clu&Wed Aca
2 IJall>oa Coves 6'l">433l T'clm bad! to ''Buslnem ~
White efepban&.t! Dlme--.:uia White eWplluti! Dime-a-line portunities" NOW!
... i-_:
STA R GA~EK~'•
t-----.:.-.-~~-BwCJ.AfLl'Ol.JA~~~....-~~-t
. --. -.-...... --._ . .. .. ._ -·
'THE fJEAL
E .'..:;Tl\TER .'_:
1003 Baker, C.M.
$118 Per Month
lncludrs Taxea on low biter-
f'St exiltini loan. 3 Bedroom
homl' ol oomlortablie lJvinr.
Owner wUl inltal1 Dl!'W car-
petinr a n d drape9. A
GREAT VA.LUE at Clllly
S17.P>. NO DOWN VETS.
$500 DOWN FHA. TERMS.
rosT .A MESA OFFICE
2&'a u.b>r Blvd.
5'69491 Open tiU 9 PM
$21 ,500
3 BR, 2 BA Elutl!<le tree
lined stnet. Sharp A: neat.
Ownu movins to Canada.
10'\. down l you're In.
at
Victorft
'4Ut11
lfT THE OCW
BE YOUR IACI Y AID
ly Oweer
<lmmtna 2 BR. l bathl an
lot ' " wltb lalp aedmSed patio. IDCGIM Uatt poulble,
new carpeta and drapes.
liiii-iiiiwiiii-iiii Watch the aeap11a tram ~ 3'1.'1SO. ~ sWAou °"" 4 bein>om •• bath=======
.RAND NEW home wlth 101' at water'•
edp wtdl 11' boat dodt la
Spilt lfov~I ~ex HUNTING'roN RAR.BOUR'S
Bu + Sundeck ~ illandl .t chm-
$52,500 nela. $95,000 6 J011 own the
UDO SANDS
3 Bedroom. 2 baths
$23,500
~e WUllamJM, Rltr.
673-4350 OPEN EVES.
REAL ESTA11
SALESMAN
Optni.nf tor an a~
aalespel'900 In n~ ottlce,
top location. E.xeoel. comm.
All replies confldential.
PERROll RfAl TY CO.
HARBOR VIEW
HILLS
CeroN .. Mar
Lollt • built bomff .locab!d
In the Southland'• IDOlt cs.
strabk l rucma-ara
Sc:boola ' c.1lf. Jntne C'ampu1 just DI 0 Ill t 8 t I
away.
s.iaibl'y pricr4 from
SM,900 tio M&.IDO
LUSK HOMll
~~lhiil.
..... Pmciftc ()la9l HWy. cA
N..,.-t ,._,, 'hm • a..
...... lnl1I M.. .. ............... -.
s ........ Poal
fler aU.."9t....,.,. ..... ao... ......... ............ ,,. .. ..... ,..... ...... .............
Jli'b.W'aliiililcmlll6tl&. ....... ..., .... uxmwrr UALft
....... QI _.DD .._ n....,,.. cd
1111 --,.. ..
land. Aak b 1'ldtll! BnN
Huntl""°" H-rbour s.a. c.,..
(l13) 430-3511 °'
<n-0 NT-2531
-------
$4,000 DOWN
Custom Built 3 Bdnm J
be.Ula., 2 ......... St.pl
to bay &DI! beeda. 4Cll )tho..
tr Ave., NB <Mncr. I0-1115,
Eves. 675-1869
...... ......., .. 1JOO
OCIANPltONT
Neal' Kadlor mtra.ne.
attiw:tl9w bdrm., fplc
patio wttb privley. Guest
pm1dns. NOW $7'2,500
R. s. ruu:m, R.eelty
3416 Via LidD 6T.J.QX)
Lide We 1151
UDO-POOL-IUY!
Shal7 J bedroom + dm
wltb II A f pool 50' Jot. JUlt
ftdoced to •.soo.
Udo IUtJ 3400 Via Lido
m.'830
i . .. . . . .. . . .
:.•
ADUI.TtONLY
,.1741 TUltltt Aw..
¢iita Me. 6a H41
• -
;·· .. ·~ HOim
1. . ....
TOWN HOUSIS
floM $171 ,,, ....
~ .. ~-.... ,. ... _ ......... _.,. ..... . .
\.
. . -. . -...
IOl Daftr, (Suite Dl NB
1194 PSacentill. <blt:a Kea
la Marpnt, N-pt. Sch
W. I.. SMlLEY C. P. A.
Callb'appt. ....
. ' .. .. . .. . . . . ... ..... •'-' .. . . ..,.
~~!~ ... o
ti.A!NOR'I LANDICAPING
6 OAJU>DfJNG IDvtCS
Statit llclrlled oantrecr,
Rt'Sidential • Oommuclal
...... llt<No Joll tao bl&!
\ mat
IO'Y'I 10·14
Gd...., ·~Oilod ...... IUB()A~
DAILY PR.OT . --.
. ...
We prefer a recent min-
imum of 1 )'Ml' doc!k '
room upctence wftldD
tbe 4!14!Ctranic ll'ldllltry
and be llblf to
will • ·••tn'llm
ftdiOo.
ElECTROlllC : ~:
Bl&IER .
We have an tmmedf.te
opentna ban~
with a minimum ot a..
years 902id ate diadt ·
deldp o:pedea.
CONTACI' H. C. RO!IS
l'Oft APPOIN'I'MBNT
~
Wl&MI .. i •• ~ :
Division of Sdenttne
Industr\et, Inc. -1801 E. Cer._.. Ave.
Sant• AM 546 1830
Dlll1 PRfS1.:
OPWJOIS_ -..,
J. (. W1ER co.
671 w. 17th s.;_ •. Celt• Meu _,, .
541-M21 . .:;. ':
Aa equal~ '
employer
,. .. -· ·--······· ·-· ···-····--····· " ..
t;.,Iwant•. Min 7200 ~•to wente4. M.t naa twp • ......_ MM 7200 "\t!.,........,
.. •• • tel
-M&CHANfCAL
--XSS!M8Ll lS
ExNience pmtmd 11'1
auefhbl)t of ~tntupl
~or ~W:I. WW coo-
•ldtt' thole Wltb sood
mechanical ex~
in manut.CIUl"lnf or mll~
111:r';~l'YIC' Wllh ability
to-~d blu,printa.
Profit aharln~
Min 45 hr work wttk
J. t CARTU CO. -671 W. 17th St.
Cost•~
54~21
An qua.I opportumt)'
employ'r
j lMfKHPER
~~ rrqwmt 1n
niptlttpin& actmty 111
ml.l\Oflcturing W I t h
kndWttdi:' of machl:nt
shop operations.
45 hr min wori< week
Profit SMrin1
J •. C. CARTER CO.
671 W. 17th St.
Cott• Mew
• 541-3421
Al\. equal oPpottUntty
employtt
Police Officers
• CtTY Of
N!WPORT IEACH
S6J6 • m ~r mo. Ex-
cellmt benefits. Men ln-
tere11ed Ill carttra In
pralea1onal law enlorcfo..
ment tnvlted lo come In
or C'all for employmnt
CJl'll0'1Ul'I it)' .nnounce-
ment 1Mnr detaila of
March 29 te.1. Per10nnel
ottlct, Oty HaU, DlO
Newport Blvd., Newport
3e1ch. Calif. 92660. Area
Olde n4 91'3-2110
-BUSBOYS
DISHWASHERS
-11 °'Older
DAY SHlfT
APPLY IH PERSON •u and w
REUlll l lEE
151 I . Cont Hlfhw•y
Newport leech
MAOUllSTS
'MHl-ldle
Drill Press
.txpttlenced machlnlsta for
day llhlft. New modem la-
clllLiell. Contact Bob O.uah-
erty II
RADIA TRONICS, INC.
18842 Teller Ave.
Newport Beach
A.a eq\lal opportunity
employer
M1n19ement T reinee
NatiOnal Finance firm bu
planned manaremeftt tnln-
tn1 prosram tor lf'Ver&I ·~
pllcants. If you arr l!ffk1~
rapld'actvancelnftlt into an
adrruni-.tnulvf' position and
In at leut • lu1h acbool
1J'9du1te, you may quality
for thl.a program Thoiw •
lttted wW be UllUN'd OUl•
atand!na 'mploye Mnt'llta
Phooe Mr Bumhllm for
l&D lib
Tedllid11
Two yHtS collfse and
two yean al upenence
or llve )'MR ~
1n1ene~~
Produdion
Test Technidln
2nd Shi~
Must poueq lmowltdge
of electr1cal and eltt'-
tronic: lest theory, maln-
l~ and ul.ibrat!on
of electronic test equip-
ment. We welcomf' candi·
dates who have compltt·
td ttdvncal. training
8Chool or r«er!I military
f'ltttrorucs cou~
Engineering
Records
Technician
Mm ht> able to work any
shift. hours, weekends.
Knowledge ol film ~
re'l3mg, microfilm and
prllTtf'TS.
Cont1ct Steve Joyce
133-0600 ext 2112
COWNS
RADIO CO.
19700 J1mbor.. Rd.
Newport S..ch
All appli~ta reviewed on
~rit wtth no biu ton.rd
Race, Color, Creed or Sex.
Mileri1I
Control Clerk
Mu1th•vetu1 l c
knowledge of shop
procedu,.. with •
minimum of two to
f i v e yeut related
wortc such 11 Produc·
tlon Control, Inven-
tory Control. Some
tchedullng experience
alto nec--..ry.
CADIUJC &AGE •
Wll1 COlST
18'6 WWttier Ave.
Costa Mesa
646-2491
An ~ opportunlQr
employer
Local manufKtvrer hes
lmmecU•te openings for:
• Electronic
Assemblen
•Wiremen
We •re •n est•bllshed
commercial firm wit~
llberel fringe benefits.
ONLY EXPERIENCED
PEOPLE
1hould apply te
PWMORICS
929 .. leer St,...
Costa Meta
549-2221 appt. 638-3911 ____
1
Bartenders
APPLY JN PERSON
i.u and 3-5
RfUBEI E. W
l ~l. Cont Hlvhw1y
NEWPORT IEACH
Gllss <hopper-Mia
h~
Part or flJ.Q dmt.
Good "1np btneflta.
23' I· 0--. IW
GmNna Olt> 321·2'05
=-Expe-,-. & qualified only
Top Wages
Flln'eglau tool makers, wood
mock-up, band laminating,
Gelcoat toucb-up, IUder ' bonder, tin. assembly, lln-
lah carpenter.
C'OLUMBIA YACHT
275 McCormick An .. C.M.
G R E AT OPPOR'IVNITY
for 2 lnduatrloul u.lftmen
to lake over ftl1 commacial
aftice. Good Jeada la U •
cMnlel to wort an.. Cd
tor appointment.
W. E. ~ Rea11ar
1l60 Newport Shod., CM
64l-.J9'Z3 CaD Eves. f7M,;T7
$70 WED
Pwt Time Ew
-----..-----6 lo 10: JO P M. No e'lQ)er net'-
f!91&1'1. NMt ad depmd.
able. SAJa A .Mrvb. Call
S.t. !un ... ' "'* far in-~ sn-nm
f..atp wor4d .. ~
ahaO ... .-NWwt •
~tr1lnh1
~-Onnce
eouncy and often ~
t)onal opportunittiP.I for
yoona mm l! te 21.
$135 ,.f' ........ ry
"f' ~ not .. c:mc:::irmtd wiUI )'OUr ~ work
ex~rie~ u we art
your detlre to be tra.IMd
for manaitement. A limit·
td nUJnbtr ot ownieu
IS!liJlments available
attn 6 montba tn.irl1111.
SlO,IXJ> to SlS,000 first
y'ar potential
Call 539-1113
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
. SKILLED
AND
UNSKILLED
MEN NEEDED NOW
TO FILL VACANCIES lN
NEW DEPARTMENT
OPENINGS DUE TO EX-
PANSION fN OUR OR.-
ANGE COUNTY DrvISIO!'f.
STARTING SALARY
$120
per w .. lc & up
IMMEDIATE EMPLOY-
MENT FOR nfOSE WHO
QUA LI 1' Y. COMPLETE
JOB TRAINJNG AND RAP-
ID ADVANCEMENT.
IEXAIR INC.
OltANGE (X){1HTY DIV.
For lntormaticll call
Monday A~
w .2311
AQUA-TROL
Hydro • [)ynamb DITillon
needa 29 mm t111medlatel1
Sevt~ Dept. oponl• •
Sala l: SerY\Ce, Credit
Peraonnel Manaaement
Tra!N!e. ~mo. min. pa,..
antee If quaMed. All depta.
h1We Trlinlnr Prorntm.
Sktlled or UnsldDed accept.
lablt. Hii'b achool srada or
Pennancnt put Cllae po.
lltion. Gaaruteecl a min-
imum ot U In per week.
Phone for app't for lntB-
vt.w.
WOllD
SIYings ' loll
4N-Nll
OUTSIDE a.ASSIF1ED
ADVERTISING SALES
lmmedlaw pollticll svail.able
fer aareaf Ye, a l • Pt
1&1~ wtth pleaaiJlll
penonatltf. MUST HAVE
NEWSPAPER QA&gJ'IED
SA.LES EXPERIENCE. La-
crattve ten11or'1. wort tram
Huntina'tm Bncll of11ce. la·
lu'y plu c:om.aWr*Je. car
expeme, paid inluraDce,
paid ncationa, all ccm-
pany beneftb. CaD ~
Gannoa lor appointment.
ORANGE COUNTY
EVDIING NEWS A
HUNTINGTON BEACH
INDEPENDENT
53'1·7510 or 89'1-4463
Local M~ baa
immediate q>enins for
pe-l"llOD capable of dolns
Coll-~~
Uon and 11.lk 1c:reen1n1.
Ex~ dnirahle but
not required. We are 111
mabtisbed cmnmerdal
ftrm with llle.Nl frtnp
beneftta.
Pleue apply
PAIAMITRICS
929 Baker Street
ea.ta Meta
549-2271
Sl1tlstlul Typist
Prelerably with 10me 1mow.
led1e of ~ re-
quired by
John Barry • Aaloclalet
l1ifanapment ~
30JO Newport Blvd., N.B.
Pleue phone hter Andrews
67>3551
equF':1~1<:at1<Jn wo Office Manager
C AUt.7 Nationwide ftlm C01DP1U11 ALL Sf7-net!d1 11\arp lh'l to manap
new branch otfiee Lq'\Da
Salesmen & Mlftllt" S.ch -San Oemmte ar•.
Cued GppartJ wltll ~ Anlwer tekphaoe, dispatch
flrm alfntns .,.. 1aD ~ Illes npa. Sa1arJ and boars
tual flmda. J'aD .. pt tlJM, open. 1414.\:jl Encanto (CCI'>
No aper oeie. .. tram. aer ol CM.a Hlchwtr> Dana
Npt ti.,_, IG-fm ~ AA111 l-4 P.M. Kr.
1uta Ana omce, 547-ISll ~·
llrvsmn 1'lnancW ii' You can eaaatruct an ~ Inc. bitelliaer.t letter, type IO
S E R V • S t a • A t hi D wpm, Ulte detail wort Ir
Full/pert time, all hrs. If the 35 br WW'k-....
Tom ShaJ1> Unlon 2201 E peala to yoa. WUJ $350,
Cit Hwy CdM OR 3-3320 c8ll Mr. ManbaD., Clrcula-
SERVICE Station Attendent ~Uon~"'"'Dep~t • .,,.646._· _llOI ___ _
Experience preferred, di.YI-BARMAIDS ..••
Superior Shell SuYICf' ... and GO.GO
1495 Sus>enor Ave .• N.B. DANCERS
$300 per week
Agenclff, Women 1300 638-S483 cw '33-9763
Personnel Agency
901 O.Ver Drive
Newport leuh
"42·7414 S4U020
S.Crtt1ry MOO
~ needs ftll>, iwet
111 u/3S. SH 90+, type IO.
<t~ remburledl
WOMAN tD WOl"k ID Donut
Shop 9 P .M. to S A.M. Apply
In perean, no pbooe calla
pleue. Wlncbell'1 Dcnut
!hp. 2947 Hlrilor Blvd.
BLIND S1Tl'CH
IS~ machine) opcratara.
G • r m e n t mta. ObQi
opentan 111Uinc ~140
need llCJ'Pl1. lSIO MOIJl'O\'ia
NB. &G-86
WOMAN to can for poUo
lMlY: Hsbt homework; no
amoldna· Own trane. Mon.
ttlna Fri 7: 30 AM lo l: 30
PM. H.B. $175 Mo. 962«Z'l
REAL l'Art8.. lJ'alnff. OYer
25. Broke-la dneklper ri1
train 6 ll'Oll90r at hi• ex·
peDle> J'1U OI pvt.time.
546-7111
P.IECISION
EUCJlONtCS
ASSNLERS
We Ira• • immediate ........ ~
• I "U wtafl from U
)Wt'S aqi L 1dcf,
'""' fallSaJ allgJlnlfftt riJ
be ID oar .-m• lntfSl'9-ttan ad teie area at the
~ depertnmrt ~ woct!ls prlllttd ctrcultll
tnim ...-..inr roles.
Good ..._ rate and a.
eellmt company beoefita
indudlal u daya .-cation
cb'flll tlae J9r al emplo)«-
IMl!t. In Mdltion. we wm
ftlomte b • new llir cm-
dltioeed plant m ~ Irvtae
emiJla ( 1111.jacf'nt to die Onnae Olanty A.lrport) •
April 18.
Apply 8:31 am to 4::ll pn.
Evenills ~may be
amanpJd.
VARIAN DATA
M,(CHINES
1590 MONROVIA
NEWPORT BEACH
('714) &4&-9371
An equal opportunl_,
employer M/F
Electrwtk Com,eMntt
1'heee opentnp NCJ'M •
mantfll recent expdtmoe
in eleetraalc eotn'*"'1t
Ule'D1bf:J .,ationa. To
qualtfy 100 mmt know
cob md!ns a n cl bed
eolderinl~
VISIT
DANA
llborlf orles, Inc.
2401 Campve Dr.
lrvlne, Callf.
fNear ~ Oo. Airport)
An equal oppommjty
empl0'1ft'
STAFF llllSES
F.or P.M. end Mtftt
shifts. On turtfal,
Medical 11'M1 l.C.U.
units.
lx..u...t •lery
and IMMflts
'l'El...EP'ftON
PERSONNEL 01TICE
ST. JOSIPH'S
I
llOSPflAl
OAANGI 6"-'111
t
STENO CLERK
CITY OP
NEW'°9tt llACH
$420-510 per mo. 'Exe&
lent benefta Requires
hlati IChDol snd. and one ,_.. alo expert..
ence. MW • PtnGD-
nel ~Ob' Ban. DOI N~ ... ,, H..,ort
ae.cti.
Cashier Hostea
Neoat aww• JJ..tl, ao
aper NI II y.
A~ Ila Pftll)ft:
lob's lft a.y
154 E. l'ftb St., CM
Gener•I Office $350
Must run 1D key add.. ~
50 wpm. Need ~rton who
likes detail 'W'Ol'4r. Lot of ~
teaUal. (compe.ny paya %
fee)
Records Clerk $350
Mature woman needed lo
.. l.lP reciord1, ellC1'0W filet
and bddle loan depoelta.
Mu.st bave excellent mmlOry
and b. ablt to wortr on her
• NURSES AIDES, c"1s • OPPOirifNITY
P.M.'a. Parlt Lido. c.. CA1 .... '--Ill vaie.cent Center, 4 61 ...,..,
l'laphlp Rd. N.B. ~ Tum apuw ~ lbto D1iODo
Dft.APERY wrknn, Power ey. Repraeiat A,,_,
.M.chtn. opus a Exper all Call eiaP.it ._..
~tlonl. Beach Draperta, -===:::oic=::::;;== CM S40-64&I °'"'-(JM rwtm~l -:':':'==-=--~.,,.----,
Alm fw polidons
[::)E) .......... .--... ... -.... __. ... ---Phcne 'JOOAY JR
u awliatiiHilt tar • men REWARDING nm.nu:..
'42-tOeO fer .,,.. ....
Te~ Op. ~ .... to $CIO
Seq/Blqlr, 30 up .... to -
Pa., .,,_, lU t.tdl •• tX a»
ARGUS IMPLOYf,\INT
"': ..... ......
. . . ,. .
COUllS
UDIO CO.
All eppliancta reviewed -
merit wtth no blu tuoirard
~. <blor, Q'Md OI' Sex.
J. t
PBllEY'S
llWEST STORE
IN
NEWPORT a!ACH
HAS
PAIT & FUU. llME
POSlnONS '°' S.let In • S'°1tTING GOOOS e HAIDWARI e COSMITlCIAN
• flUltNf'tUll e SIWlNG MACHINIS
Recent NCCeuflll uperi-
ence preferred. Generous
ben4)t }ll'Oll'&m c ..
-~
APf'l.1 n'c; p~
MCM>AY THJtt:J rRJJ>~'T
10 A.If. TO 4 P.N.
~~
J.C. PINNEY CO. ....,.rt Centet'
24 flahlen lstal'MI
.....,.,, IMch. eant.
An equal Ol)pOI tuDU:J
empioyn
• Traffic
Entlnterint Aide
e Engineering
Dl'tfttmaft
CITY Of
NEWPORT IEACH
s;A~ per mo. Excel·
lent befteflt& 'lbe two
poaitklna now available
requh blP actMIOI and
and two YtlUI related ex-
periellce, or one year
eoUeae and one yeu «·
perlence. For details al
tbe9e chal1enctn& poli-
tiofta tnqWre PtnOMel omce. Otf Hall. 3300 ~ BMI.., N""PCll't
Be.cti.
MobtleHlfM
Experience •
lxciellent ~ty
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MOTOIHOME COIP •
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wltb C.P.A. or ~.A. G•
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u:n:TlME Gift • <lUleoet lO
lemclD ,.,.. 8cbool 1Tl l)d
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Wudbzer mol GT ...
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$40..21'5
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Station waaan boa. 3 aeattt,
radio and beaw, like brand
$1485
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'U CAPllCI Cll. al" '
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'U CAPtlCI 4 DL
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$2495 :;:.
''6 IMPAU CPI "r
AT.n.AC·l-H Y•llhi $2395 ·-•
'U MAUIU CPI.
Af.P'S.R·H W.i+. •
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$1795
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:r.
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'H MAUIV Oln
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AT·PS.R-H SilYeC.l
$1795 1J
'61 llSCAYMI J IA.
AT·PS.A·ti T.,~
$1495
''4 IMPAl.A CPI
AT.f'S.l·H·AC lei ... , .. $1695 ..•.
'64 CHm II 111 J IL
AT T'"~ .
$195 '
'61 l.,,M.A 4 DL T
AT·AC·P'S·R·H White:
$1195
·u ltlCAYNI • II. ~r .
00.l-H W\i+.
$7'5 --. I •
'61 , .. ~ CPI . j
/.f.PS-AC-lt·H ~: •
$9t5 /i
'It IMPALA 4 11.· -
AT·P'S-~ lledc •
$595
OTHft
MAKES ---·
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O~:\ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Answers Needed First
Fre6hman Assemblyman John V. Brigfl (R.Fuller-
ton) last wuk jaain demon1trated thlt be is both stub-
born and a hip-shooter wbo moves without considering
all the con.sequences.
L11t year it took a personal plea from Gov. Ronald
Reagan to get him to vote for the adminilttatioo'a
budget·balancmg bill. In that in&'tance, he had been both
stubborn in behalf of an ideological position and in·
different to the consequences of h..i! stubbornness.
Last week he disregarded the pleas of more
thoughtful and knowledgable civic leaders and introduc·
ed a bill to abohsb the Orange County Harbor OistricL
"If my bill is approved, the supervisors will have to
get a two-thirds vote of the people or raise the county
tax rate before undertaking any major capital improve-
ments for harbor, parks and recreation," Briggs said.
What Briggs neglected to announce, of course, is
that knowledgeable officials on both sides of the issue
are concerned that Brigge' meat-axe approach could
create a bigger problem than it professes to solve.
A League of Cities report and the report o( a spe-
cial group of the Board of Supervisors indicate that
any changes in the harbor district operation require
very careful study and negotiation at the local level -
not premature meddling from Sacramento.
The harbor district has come under political at-
tack partly because Huntington Beach wants a different
sharing of funds and partly because some inland county
cities feel they aren't getting their money's worth
from Harbor District taxes.
Huntington Beach may have a legitimate basil for
complaint. But that could and should be worked out
without any such drastic state legislatioo as the Briggfl
bill. The idea that the county as a whole bas oot re-
ceived its money's worth is not borne out by Harbor
District studies extending over three decades. These
studies suggest that for every $1 mvested by . Orange
Countians in their harbor d!tilrict, the return i.n taxes
and benefits has amounted to $2.49.
Today the district's tax rate is slighUy more than
nine cents per $100 of assessed valuation. From UliJ
'The Naked Ape'
A Shallow Book
W it h fascinating predictability
whenever the general public decides
ff or one reason or another) to become
int.e~ in 1 terioos subject, it \n-
variably picks a poor book to learn It
from.
A couple of aeasoru ago. Robert
Ardrey'a book. ''The T t r r i t o r I a I
Imperative," became the coffee-table
favorite; and a great deal of cocktail·
party chatter was devoted to the idea
of "tftrltory" aa explaining man'a
combative and aggression behavior
throutb history.
THERE IS A LARGE and learned
Uterature on territorial behavior, but
the Ardrey book was a aballow
specimen, which took a narrow idea
and tried to 1tretcb it b e y o n d its
legitimate use. While it ls true that
many apecles ITe "territory-minded,"
It ls not even true for man11 closest
r'latlves among Jiving primates, the
gorilla and the chimp. and much less
80 for man himself, despite the
auperficlal appearance.
Now the newest best seller is a book
called ·~e Naked Ape." which points
out our animal heritage and our
similarities to other members of the
ape family. The theme pf the book Is
that if W1! more thoroughly understood
ours~tves as animals we might
diminish OUT expectations, relax our
anxieties. and behave a tittle less
hyst.eTically in the face of personal
and social problems
Bt'T "TH!: NAKED APE'' is 35
ghallow and one-sided a book as "The
Territorial Imperative.'' in Its own
way. lb marin mistake is the assump-
lion that much human behavior is
predicated on our "animal" origin,
whereas the really frustrating pro-
blems are those that come from our
profound differences from o t h e r
animal species.
Killing, of courae, b perhaps the
moat 1erloU1 problem. Except for a
few 1traln1 of anu, other species do
not kill one another within the same
species; again, our nearest 1Jving
,..Jatlvea, the 1orillu and the cbJmps.
are remarkably paclfistlc and rarely
even attack one another phyaJcally,
much less murder.
AS PROF. MARSTON BATES has
put it, there 1t a streak of meanness in
human beings that other animals do
not possess; In aome way, their
behavior is more ''rational" than oun
-they attack only out of hunger or
other basic drives; we attack because
of pride, ra«ie. feelings of inferiority.
bigotry, snobbishness, boredom, and
what not.
1t Is not the ape within us that
makes Ufe hard. but the non-ape. It is
that strangely mixed-up mental and
emotional structure of m1tn that
makes us the cruel predators or the
world, not our primate ancestry. Some
of OUT behavior, of course. ls anmlal in
origin: but that la the harmless part.
as compared to those activities that
end in war. in persecution. in
despotism. and in mutual self.destruc-
tion
Lack of Involvement
Tn the Editor·
E B. O'Neill's e<>ncern over ex-
po~i,.~ 1he public to the realities of lire
lhro11gh such news coverage as the
dra··, ohoto t Mailbox. March 191
shows to me the lack o< involvement
tha' · rea'"'I the "obscene" situation.
IMr O'Nt rlL objectrd to publico
tior1 of 0 rmn<o of 0 (.'Oftl'ict shot b"
f>'llrr.e nrd felt M m•"1t shrtld hJ
1ei·r11·11ear-old $On from such Mw~
coverage. -Editor J
'' it felt that non.coverage of such
events will "Umlnate their M,,pening ~
J'ri ~ure most of us feel the same
sickness in aeoing a man die through
de%erate intent. I think we alsio ftf'I
th~t there must have been a better
ent1ing possible
SEVEN-YEAR OLD sons had better
soon undertta.od the wo.-ld in whJch
they live. for they have the potential
for improvlnf It The parent has a
duty to JuJUty bi1 creatin1 oUspri.ni.
Tbt Joya and security that children
brinJ to their partnts are not auf-
LdUn fTom rtaders are ~tcome
Nornw.U11 1DT'itt1's ihould con ve11 then
messagu in 300 wordl or Lus. The
right. to c011deme letters to Ht spau
,,, eliminate libel u reserwd. AU let·
't1'1 fnU$t melt.Ide 11gnaturc and '"4tl·
mg addrus. but "'11MI will bf with-
··eld on request.
hcient. Pa.rents' interest In their
children ls a seUish ooe, lf they fail to
stress the importan~ to the child of a
need In better that which Is around
h1m. An active interest In anything
from obscenity to reveren~ will
hopefully in timt eliminate the
reporting of t.bt Death of Man.
DENNIS KOLEMAINEN
Fact• of Uf e
To the Edltor:
.Re1ardln1 the letter to tbe editw
rantmi about the death photo Of the
convict mun me want to aag. u
more parents took the tbne to 1bow
their children abocklnJ pic:tuns ol We
•• It reaDy ls 1'1U. u explanation of
why aome of theH things happen,
ma,ybe, Jut ma7be, eome Of il 18.Q
rub olt and help to mah tbla a llWt
better place to Uw.
It Sttml to me that peopt. ~
try 1pendin1 some t.tm. vtslttq IDd comtortlnc aome ol tbe famWu ol tbe
Ylctim• and lell ttme t.al:in1 aJapl at
the c~ who art IG reality the bdf.
fer D tblna and the PUJIU IOCb
., UM Ont Jn Ute pbotoo-ph. n..
an lbt fllC'tl ol life wblUm ane ,_.
... lib .. Cir not.
J ,E ICRZlfL'UD
revenue, the dWrict now proftd• engineering ror fo-
ture projecU, harbor pat.roJs ud manne fil"ef1atJt,lq
and rescue M"lces. rt Ille> alloelted $118,000 to-~
al city lif eeuards lor prot.ctlon of eounty beacbe1.
Earlier th1I month, tb• DAILY PILOT ralHd some
of the questiou tint tbould be lllrftred bllore Uy
decilion ia taken to cbqe t.bt present 1et-up.
For example, eould, or would. the county eon&imlt
to nnance public aervtces within tity limJ~? Are the
cities willing lo pick up tbe tu tab' What would be
the effects on projecta 1ucb u Dana Point Harbor, Sun-
set Aquatic Part or AliJO Beacb Park" Would county
government continue augmmin1 funds to city lifecuard
deparlmeota for service on county beaches?
Puttint an issue so important lnto this kind of pr•
surMOOker is irrespODIJble government.
How Times Have Changed!
Almost all o( the Hollywood of yesterday ii 1one.
Many film sun have shJpped themselves off to Europe
for tu reasona, many ot the films are made oat
of Hollywood, and the stars themselves bJve lost most
oC the beadline-making antics and 41uirb that Uled to
titillate the public.
It was lite old home week. then, to n!ad of the
Cary Grant-Dyan Cannon divorce.
There it was: accusation.a, drup, personal peeb at
the private lives of two famed and colorful peraonalities.
And au of it recited in 1lowing ~tail for the avid stu·
dent of the film notables.
It wu a divorce action out oC the past in all but
one factor, alimony. In those glorious days of yester·
year, a blond star of Miss Cannon's stattM would have
asked for the moon and probably have gotten it.
The judge in this caae let her ultimate alimony at
a paltry $1,000 a month.
Scarcely enough for the hairdresser in the good
old days.
Ho: 'What ls
Rusk Talking
Brilliant Ideas Seem to Come flt Nlglat
About?'
WASHINGTON -Mr. Rusk WIS
wearing a rather pained look by the
end of bis second day cl testifying
before Senator Fulbright'• committee.
And you can't blame him.
He aald be fett that publicly televis-
ing tb1s investigation cl our policies
in Vietnam, "with tbe whole world
watcttlng," would prove of great
benefit lo Premier Ho Chi Minh in
Hanoi.
With 1 shudder we can envision
the C}eeflll anticipation with which
Premier Ho, hia interpnten and bis
expe?U pth~ around t b e i r
Cbineae-madt television Ht to turn
on and tune tn.
He (rubblnl hia handl): Ah. now
we shall diJCOVer the Meret plotl
and strategies or the f o o 11 11 h
Americam. What is Rusk talkina
about?
ln&erprder: The Foreign Aid bill, sir.
The bearing i• about the Foreign Aid
bill.
Ho : TLU>e to another hearing. We
are not interested in their foreign
aid.
Expert: Neither are the Senators, sir.
See, Senator Fulbright is asking about
this "dltaatrous" war. He w211ta to
know if it la true the President wUl
send another 2()5,CO> troops.
Ho (happily): Ah, now we shall learn
their plans. What does Rus.k say?
lnterpnter: He says be doe.n't know.
He says they are "coetidering all
alternatives."
Ro: Hmmm, write that down. It may
mND somethin1. Now wbet ia he
•.,me? I• '*et.er: He i11 saying America
i1 ~g Communist. aggress1oa,
defending the free wor1d and organlz..
ini the peace.
Ho: At last they have reveaied tbelr
baalc strategy. Wbat does Fulbri&ht
uy?
latupreter: He is aaying it ia a
disastrous war.
Ho: And bow does Rusk reply?
Interpreter: He Is saying t b 1 t
America ls fighting Commimlat ac·
greuioo, defending the . . .
Ho: Never mind. Let ua atay tu•
We may learn aomethln1 elae.
CEleven hours ol televtmon vlewtq
later)
Ro (bleary eyed): Now what is Ruak
saying?
Jaterprel.er: He ls aaying America
la fighting Communltt a~ssjam,
defendlng ...
Ho : All ri&bt. all rigbl But tbete
other Senators, they have been talklna
at great length, too. What have they
been 11Ytnc?
letel"prder: Some aay the war
dilartroQs.. Some 111 America
flehtlng Cammunlst au ...
Ro (anpily): 'f:1n:hut up.
Expert: Juat , alr. Thltlks tt
the fooU.hne11 of these Americau
In publ.IClJ tN~ t h e I r 1»-
•tsl.ICation, we bO"tr ... ery sir>de
tblna about their Admlnittration'•
POUciea that the Senate and tbl
American pilOp&t know. Now , air. What
are Y* ln1tr\adlonl?
... , ... a ..., 8'1h): Cbanat u.
lt&doe to "I Ru'Y RDCJ.''
~Otes •
. . . . . .
Bobby's Impossible Deals
WASHlNGTON -Our political
history has been replete with deals
-the Square Deal, the New Deal,
the Fair Deal But we bavo not had
as many deall come in rapid IUC·
cession as since Sen. Robert F. JCen·
nedy decided to nm for Preaidenl
First it w11 a deal with Sen. Eugene
McCarthv to pool polltlcal resource.1.
which McCarthy scomfu'ly rejected.
Then it was 1 deal with J>realdent
JohlllOn on the Vietnam war, rejected
with even more emphasis.
Whichever version of the Kennedy·
Johnson deal you credit, one point
1tanda out cryatal clear. Sen. Kennedy
promised not to run for President
if Jo~ would abandon hit o~
jectlvtt in the Vietnam war. Johnson
would not do ao or give 111y reuon
to 1u.spect that he milht do so, and
10 Sen. Kennedy announced his can-
didacy.
A LITl'LE INVESTIGATION ahows
that the Kennedy deal to aet tn> a
co1J11D11alon loaded In advance against
the Vietnam war was an Ingenuous
propoul rankin1 in inventiveneu with
the invaaion of the Bay of Pigs which
the Kennedy brothera undertook in
the fint year of the K'nnedy ad-
ml.nis1ration.
Some aspects of it are beyond belief.
The commission WIS not only to be
loaded with known and committed
opponenta of Amerlean policy in Viet-
nam but the 1aggetUon was di9Cutsed
that u. President ~ ~
lD advance that be would be bound
by the commission'• f.l.ndinp. The pro-
poaal WIS alao discussed that Prest-
dent Johnson should state that he
bad erred iJl Vietnam.
Even Sen. Ke.nnecty perceived the
impossibility of a Pre1Jdent aound in
mind and body miking any 1ucb com-
mJtments or admJ.uion.s. Sen. Kennedy
even aaw the wisdom of his not aerv·
ing as chairman of the commlulon
althougb be wu willing to sit 11
a member, the only senator proposed
for the commluion in the initial
diacuaaion.
ANOTBEll ASPECT of these deals
provokes thought. The brilliant ideas
aeem to come at night Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy went wtnsmg out of
Wuhington to Wilconsin to arouse
Sen. McCar1by at 3 a.m. with the
implications of a deal. Defense Sec.
Clark M. Clifford was routed out of
his bed at bome at 11:30 p.m. with
a request from Teddy to see Bobby
the next day. Clifford at that moment
had not beard from the President
or anybody else what it was all about,
ucept tbat lt Involved Vietnam.
Tbe mJdnll)rt rlden of the Kennedy
campaip now create the aame
frenetic atmosphere as in advance
of the Bay of Plg1 and during the
civil rifhtl eonfrontationa with ahirt-
aleeved Bobby Kennedy directing
operatiom.
Sen. XellDldy'a position that be was
aomebow traduced and trapped into
makint a propoaltion wb.lcll the Presl·
deat then publiclud and ICOl'Ded Is
a little bard to follow. He made his
proposal directly and clearly to Cllf.
ford and, with the urgency that
motivates .him. demanded th e
President's answer before the day
was done or el.le be would nm for
President
KENNEDY WAS N<YI' 1oint In pt.
ting the answer. CUUord took the
proposition to the White Houae without
expreulng an opinion on lt Jo
rejected it inttantly u totally umc
ceptable. wbatenr be may ha
earlier thought about qorin( th
idea abd by late afternoon Ken
and Sorensen bad their an.nrer
telephone ftom cu.ttord.
KennedJ'1 awarene11 of what a
Pre1ident could ar could not do under
thete circumstancM arouse. tbe Judi·
ment tbat he did not at any rtafe
really expect Johnson to accept h1I
proposal.
TAKEN SEPARATELY from the
political context and oo ita merill.
the proposal ii one wbJch Kennedy
could mike during tbe campaip but
Jts credibillty and del\JD now come stron~ly Into question. The proposal
usurps not only the power and
resoon1lbWty of the presidency l>ut
of Coogreas u well
Sen. Kennedy was ouite rllhl-ln
telling Defense Sec. Clifford that a
Pruldent could ndt blnd bbmelf to
accept the recommend•Uon di~ a comminlon in advance. ·11 be
thougbt more on tile propoaaJ lMI
never have made it at all.
.
Why He Wears Hair Long
.. You aee that fellow!0 asked a
collep billlory prof e•IOI', nodding
toward a tall young man wa'ltlns on
a nearby campua path.
I Nid l did. I noted tbe young mu had tone hair that eame down
almost to hi1 1boulder and allo wore
a tb1n dark beard.
"1 learned aomethln1 ftom hlm." lie II.id.
"Wbat? ..
"Well," lbe prolell-Ot' &&Id, "ht
CUM 1JD mf omce a few Qft *10
et band in a written a.ulpmfllt. He
klobd u if he wanted to talk. I
Wied blm to ail He uted • what J t»QOt of lab hair.
"IT WM A QUESTION I hadn't
ulklprat.d. I toJd b1m k wouldn't .wt mt, but that 1 bad no atr.a
l•llnP about ll It WU hi.a ~
ll be fOQDd it~~ .... .,,. all...,. to ID
·111 IMIQC) tnWll. ...... .., Wt. Ba Mid .. _..... .... ............
otrwdld .. €~ .... *~·
Dear
Gloomy
Gm:
• .
lta 'Bohemia." New Yort'• Grem..scb ·
VUlage n. HI iptrttua1 boma." "':
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