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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-04-09 - Newport Harbor Daily Pilot-... -............. --........ VOL 61 , NO. 8', l SECTIONS, 31 PAGES ·So DI.et West Newport's By JEROME F. COLLINS Of ... 111111'1' .... , .... Tbete's something in the air ln West Newport. But It may not be there much longer. Monday. Newport Beach city ooun· c11IM11 toot the first steps toward removing the area's odious gas seepage od<rs. It's a proj~ct, councilmen were told, Early Vote Turnout Hits 15% Just a little more than 15 per~nt of Newport Betch's 21.767 voters had balloted by lab! this morning in a hotly contested municipal election to decide three City Coltncil seats. The turnout estimate. based on DAI· LY PILOT spot checks at key precincts. was described by veteran election ofiicials as ranging from average to g~. Precinet w~keTS pointed out that some voters possibly delayed ttieir ~ DAILY PILOT switchboard IDill be open tonight to give latest mu- nicipal electifn returns. TM teLe· phom numbtr i$ 642-4321. First nutming/ul tftol& are e~cted at <tbov:i 7:30 P.1· •. trip to tbe ballot box Ill order to witness on television the funeral of Dr. Martin Luther King. ''The services were over at 10:30 a.m. and w~ noticed an iocreSISe in voters about a half an hour taler.'' reported one worker. TRADITIONALLY LIGHT Traditionally, council e 1 e cl ions seldom bring V<Ur turnouts or more than 35 perCi?nt, as was the case two years ago. That percentage was expected to be topped well before 7 o'clock tonight when 46 consolidated polling stations close. The expectations were based on a heavy barrage Of last minute. strongly worded advertising campaigns in newspapers and mailers. They un- derscored some of the bitterness in thi.o year's three council district races. SEVEN CANDIDATES The seven candldat~ are: -Dlflrld % (West Newport): AJ For· git. incumbent; Donald A. Mcinnis. industrialist; Jerry Wooters. local businessman. -Dl1trict S: Dee Cook. incumbent: Ed Hirth. retired marina operator. IHirth's name was omitted io a DAI· LY PILOT listing of candidates Mon· <lay through a typographical error.) (St>e VOTING. Page !) Mariners Park Getting 2 New Tennis Courts Mariners Park will Rel two tennis courls by s·unmer's end. Newport Beach city councilm-;n so decided Monday night by approving a sta.ff recommendation for the 132,230 project. The courts will be of reinforced con- crete and will include fe~lng, ben• ches. night Uglrting. a fountain and ae<o «•s walks. Money for the project will come out of the city's building excise tax fund, to which all developers contribute. Construction bids will be opened May 6. Puhhc Works Oiredor .Joseph .,, ilevlin scid the estimated date of completion Is Sept. 13. In approving the plans. councUmen assured the Increase ol dty tennis courts from four to sl.x. Two court.I art now located near P..U Depart· ment headquarters in Balboa and two ---•t Ole oulh ~DQr tn -or.a $1 Mar. um could cost up to $30.000. A lot of that money, however. could com~ from other agencies. Mluticipal lawmakers authori-ied the city stall: -To check with various state and county a.gencies on the possibility or participating in the anti-odor program. -To come up with the name of a petroleum engineer who would check the validity of recommendations from Newport geologist George Zebal on ways to cope wittl tll prob'-.. Zebal's 1qgesu,otw are CQilta!Md in a 40-page report th-' he do~ted to the city, much to councilmen f grateful surprise. , The geologist. who is prio.l lden- tJst for Phllco·Ford's applieC.reeearch laboratories. was on hand atMODday's council study session to ~11 bi.; report. He urged the city ~ hire .the petroleum engineer to look: over hi~ !lndings and design the systelp needed UPI TtlffllOlt A WIDOW MOURNS WHILE A NATION WATCHES Mr1. Martin Luther (Coretta) King at Funeral King's Voice Rings Out As 50,000 Mourn Leader A TI.ANT A I UPI I -The recorded voice of Dr. Martin Luther King .Jr . the "drum major for jusllce." ran~ out in his own funeral eulogy today and mules drew ttis body on a creak· ing wooden wagon through the streets of Atlanta. King's family, his closest followers and the nation's leaders crowded into his austere red brick Ebenezer Baptist Church for private ceremonies and more than 50,000 people. many sobbing uncontrollably, accompanied his coffin on a four.mile march to Morehouse ColJege for public services. Curious The slain integrati on leader -1 hi' man who had a dream of racial freedom -was carried through lhr streets in an old wooden·wheel!'rl \\agon drawn by two workworn. leather-collared mult>s. The dayl<>ng funeral serVlce. uniqur 1n American history. ended wittl h1~ entombment in a mausoleum bearinc the legend: ''Free at last. free at la~i. thank God almighty. (ree at last." King's slaying by a while sniper an Memphis last Thursday touched nt I violence across the land. As h·' (Ste DR. KING. Pafe 2) Trends Pigs, Not People, Police Problem By BROCE BE'NSON Of Ille 0th ,., ... Sllff Curious trends are developing in Bal Week '68. Arre1t11 are down. while beach al· te:ndance Is up. Newport Beach Assistant Police Chief Merrll.I Duncan sald only four adDJb IDd 2e juveniles were booked in the past 24 hours. A ye.r ago, 13 adults and 72 youngsters were hauled 1nt1n& ftilroabome darmg lhe WD~ 24 hours. In fact. the only real mischief 111 note since schools clo11ed last ~kcnrl was reported on Uoo Isle. whri r Jl()lic~ wt>re called to squelch thr squeals or two pigs. The pigs, It appeared. were rclea:.-rd by cruel pranksters to fend for themselves on the pogh, relldential ls land. Affluence being what It Is on Lido. garbage d.in>9H1S abound. and the pip could have starved to deadl, .rt (Ste TRENDS, Pate S) Your Hometown Dally Paper TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1968 TEN CENTS • ID the Air a $~0,000 · City Pain to burn off gas seepage. "If you hire a competent con· sultanl." he said, "my guess is that the entire job. including developing the system, would cost• betwttn $10.000 and $30,000." Zebal's study, undertaken on his own time over the past year. indicated the city has four seepage areas. They are: -seep No. 1, at Broad Street and Holmwood Drive ln Newport Heights. Zebal suggests that construction of a three.foot concrete "beehive'' could provide a safe means of burning orr the noxious gases. which are pnn· cipaUy methane and h y d r o g e n sulphide. -seep No. 2, running 1,250 feel along W. Coast Highway west of the Arches Overpass to a depth or about 500 feet. Zebal recommends that a perforated 12-inch line be placed underground through which gases would be piped to a burner. -Seep No. 3, 10 Channel Place Park and the result of an improperly aban· Joned Depression Era oil welJ. The geologist proposes replugging the well with fresh cement. -Seep No 4. at 43rd Street near Balboa Boulevard, also the result t>f improper oil well abandonment pro· cedures decades ago. Zebal again su~· gests pulnping fresh cement into the (See ODOR, Pa(e Z) New School Chief Hayward's Cunningham Gets Post Ry THOMAS FORTUNE 01 fltt Dally l'lltt Slaff Newport-Mesa Unified s c h o o l trus tees today annouoced they ha ve <:hosen a new superintendent. He is Dr. William L. Cunnin~ham. 42-year~ld superintendent of Hayward Unified School District. Like his predecessor. Dr. Leland R. Newcomer, his $30.000 per year salary will equal the highest paid a school ad- min lslrator in Orange County School board members decided ,.,n Dr. Cunningham late Monday njght. He was one of three candidates given final considerallon. HE-told the DAILY PILOT he IS "delighted" to be selected. lie said the Newport-Mesa district has "a fin e est~blished reputation" and "tremcn· dous potentia!." His wlfe and three children, he said. are excited at the prospect of living in 0 the Harbor Area. ?endmg release by the Hayward school board. he will assume his new post soon arter the rirst of May. He ex· peels to spend some time in the Harbor Area prior to laking over. Hayward. located 10 miles south of Oakland is a district of 30.000 students. slightly large; than Newport-Mesa's 26.000. Dr. Cunningham. •vho has been in (See SCHOOL CHIEF. Pa1e %) 100-mile CATV Ol('d \ subsidiary of one of the nallon's lop adnrtising firms will soon be • laying 100 miles of underground lines tn Newport Be.ach for the installation ~f Orange County's large!lt cable television t CA TV I system . . on Dee Cook's motion . city coun· ciJmt>n Monday night unanimously ap· proved ttte •1.2 million project. They authorized transfer of the city's CA TV franchise from Pacific Cable Services. Inc .. which had been bogged down in planning and finance problems. to newly formed Newport Beach Cablevision. Inc. Newport Cablevision is a wholly owned subi9filary of Foote. Cone and Belding. the sixth larges t ad vertisin.i: firm in the country and the only ad agency li sted on the New York Stock Exchange. In bidding for the franchise transfrr. thP huge corporation unlimbered it~ biggest executi ve guns at the council hearing. They tncluded former f ederal Com· m11nications Commussion I F CC \ chairman Newton Minow. general oounsel for Foote. Cone and Belding and a listed director of Newport Cablevision. Minow. Who new out from Chica,::o for the hearing. told cour.cilmen: ''When J was with lhe FCC. we dealt Cong Terrorists Bla ·t Barracks, Mow Down GI SAfGON <UPI )-Communist guer· rillas today blew u;> a U.S. Army bar· racks in the coastal city or Qui Nhon and machine·gunned A m e r i c a n survivors i;crambling out of thr wreckage U.S. spokesmen said a Viet Con.i: homb shattered the barracks m a pre· dawn blast The explc,sion and the m a c h I n e g u n n i n g killed five Americans and wounded 23 Thev said the Qui Nhon attack and two other terror raids today lcllled a total of 18 persons and wounded 44. rt was the irreatesl V!et ~ng terror strike since the guerrilla invasion of the citie~ Jan. 30. In Qui Nhon. some of the hla~t !lurvivors grabbed their weaponi; and. meeting in thP barrage of bu~eb outside. returned the flre. They killed at least six of the Viet Cong who at· Lacked the barracks, m I I I t a r y apokesmen said. The G ls (ired over the bod.les of friends caught In ~ 1heet1 of ~gun and a.mall arms fire laid don by the VJet Cong Jn their llabtn· Inf raid at 2:35 a.m. local time. with quesllons similar the one facm~ you gentlemen tonight -the approval of a communications fr a n c h I s e transfer. The lesson we learned was to base our judgment on whether the pro· posed new franchise·holder could do as good or better a job than the old. "We considered financia l stabilitv. experience. the character of the mrn in charge and their commitment to serve the public Interest. ''In this case, we believe our ap· plication meets these criteria." PUBLIC SERVICE Minow emphasized that "all form s" of public service would result from the 20-dlannel Newport Cablevision opera· lion. Televised sessions of the City Coun- cil and local high SC'hool basketball J?ames he cited as just t\\O cxampll"'i of "free " programs that coulc1 he ./. h riped into subscribers· homes. ·'The potential is limited only by the imagination of those here in municipal .i:overnment and by CATV ~I," he said. Richard Tully. board chairman of Foot, Cone and Belding. who Clew in Crom New York . also made a pitch. ag did several other executives and e'lgine1:rs. FOUR PHASES Councilmen were assured that the entire CA TV network would be com· pleted by Sept. 1, 1969, at an estimated cost of $1.2 million. About 100 miles of half.inch and three-quarter inch cable will be placed io tw~foot deep trenches around town. The project will be undertaken in four phases. They art>: -Pbast' 1: Westcliff. Dover Shores, (Sep CATV. Pagl' Z) 'i~ f.t * Ex-FCC Chief Minow Expects 'G reat Debate' By JEROME F. COLLINS Of lltt Otll¥ Pli.1 Slaff f ormer Federal Communicattons Commission chairman Newton Minow is confident the withdrawal of Presi- dent Johnson from the presidential racf will lead to another televised Great Debate. But Minow , visitfog Newport Beach on a business matter. ha s no idea who wilJ be doing the debating "l really don't know." he told tht> DALLY PILOT Monday. ··11onestly. I have nn 1dra al all. This 1s the wildesl polit1cai year of all tim!' No onr knows who thr final canrt1dates will be.·· I le satd ttlat Johnson's dcc1s1on makes it almost a certalnty that federal television equal time Jaws will be bent again by Congrt>ss as they were in 1960 to clear the way lor the Kennedy·Nixon TV debates. Mioow . who checked in at thl' Newportcr Inn for an overnjght stay on the West Coast. said · "Before Johnson withdrew. I didn 't feel another debate was at all possible But now it most certainly 1s: and 1t'~ desirabit>. because a Cace·lo·fact' cnn- frontaUon between candidates reall~ ~tlmulates vottt lnlerest. It's more realistic than just watching a prepared TV talk.'' The e-x·FCC chief -he presided a~ bead ol the agency from 1961 to 196.'l -waa interviewed .tit.er his ap· ~arance at a Newport Beach City Col-rcil hearing on a cable television application. He is a director of the ap· pllcant firm. Foote. Cone and Beldmg. one of the world's largest advertising (See MINOW. Page 2) or .. :A_- Weather Out with lhe bathing suits. the mercury's heading for the BO's, announces forecaster Dave Burt. who points to a sweltering 92 further inland Sunny skies. as usual. INSWE 110DA l' The four of them are 49 to- day but no one in t~ sheriff's department u celebrating. todalJ mark~ nnnlher dn11 of frel'dom fnr csrnp<'d co 1111ty 1m~o1111r&. Pnnr 11 C•lllw" I ,. Mov,,., ,. Cl•tsfflff 1>-U ... ~.1 14twl •• c .... I« Tl OrfftN CellftlY " , ........... If tvMe l'eMff ti DN• l'ltlfl-" t.cll4 tlMM ,,." O'--• --, .. , . 1"""94 l'ttoe 11 Of.I ...... ,, -----,. T_..... " .,__ " ,_.. " ,,,.. C.llt 11 ... _. ' ,,.. ........ " .......... u ~ It w .......... ... ......... II • Oday;_ Polls pen .Tilt 7 p.m~- • • ' 'J 2 DAIL V PILOT r ., Marijuana Dog ding ••ia VisitOrs Man's best friend may not be. •oct1na cm wbat tbe man m_, bt hauling b~t Mm his colh!giatt Easter Week expedllion U> Baja CaUfornia resort towns this vteek. A trained German shepherd dog will be waiting at the U. S. customs check· point at San Ysidro. along with agents * * * Frotn Pqe J TRENDS ... was observed Police said there was Little 11 anyttliog for the animals to ferret out of the Lido Isle trash pickings. The pigs were found running unhap- pily through the streets. and were taken to Orange County Ani mal Shelter. On the be11ches. munwtule. the treNt appears to be veering toward higher attendance than past Easter Weeu. Ufegua.·d Logan Lockabey said 55.000 people swarmed to the sand Monday. A year ago the same day, the <.'<-Unt was 42.000. Water and air 1"mperatures were about the same bott days. he said. "It looks like today's gomg to be at1 all-timer." Lockabey said. He noted the air temperature hit 80 degrees by 10 a.m. He said ind ications were good that the surf would be up by late this afternoon. * * ·"r Little Bunnies l(ept Hopping In Hometown Newport Beach's littlest "Easter bunnies'' -those too small to hop down to Palm Springs. Mexic;o or the ~lorado Rlver -are findin g plenty to do right in their own hometown. City Parks Department leaders are s~ing to that with a full program all week long of Bal Week activities. Five parks are invol ved in the program They are the Youth Center in Corona del Mar: Mariners Park. Ir vine Ter- race Park, 38th Street Park and Eastblulf Park Recreation Superintcodcnt D i t' k Dust.erhoft said pTojects range from ptngpong tournaments l-0 zoo trips l-0 Easter egg hunts. Schedules are posted at each park. Here's a sample. These are Wrd· nesd.ay'! activities: -Y..tll Cellkr : 10 a.m .. ya.yo com· petition: noon. dodge ball: 1 p.m .. bil· liards tournament : 3 p.m .. story-tell· ing hour. -MarlHrt Park: 10 am .. octopu<; and Red Rover ; 11 a.m .. Game oC Day; noon. cook-out (each child brings own bot dogs. hamburgers): 1 p.m .. pentathlon: 2 p.m . Easter egg decorating: 3 p m . handball lourna· ment. -ITTt.e Terrace Park: 10 a.m . Euler egg coloring; 11 a.m .. Streets and Alleys : noon. cook-out; l p.m .. lundl; 2 p.m.. bike rodeo. 3 p.m .. clean-up. -38tlt Strttt Park: 10 a .m .. Easter e~ hunt. games : 12:30 p.m .. yo-yo contest. games -Eastblurr Park: 10 a.m . organized ~ames: noon. egg coloring contest. egg toss: 2 p.m .. bunn y hop and hunt. D1Jsterhoft said two recreation le;iders will be on hand at each park. From Page 1 DR. KING. • • burnished casket was borne from his church today. the House Rules Com- mittee passed for floor action on a landmar\ Civil Rights Bill. The funeral march began before the funeral. but ~o vast were the crowd~ that tens Of thousands were still ouuide the church when the two-hour private service at Ebeneier Baptist Church ended. DAILY PILOT ....,.. ...... c.1 ....... ••"'+ M. Wt~ "*lltMr n-ic .... 11 Ed!W n-.. A. M•~'" ~ ... J.,.... f. C.lllM ,...,_, IMCll CllV ,.,.. Jactr l. C.,ley , .. I Hh-...,... ,....._. ............ ~ .....,.. ..... 0..... 2211 w... ..,. It~. Melll119 ,,...." ,.0, ._ 1111 •uu Ottiw Offk" ttlte M-.· --let 11 ... .............. ,.,....,._ ...,.,........._ ... ,... ....... check1Aa lhe relurnlnJC ~veJJers for coatrabud. The dDc amella martjuua. burmac or not. ''He bu l*'fonned q.aU• weU la tiell runs and can rtaUy spot the stuff." said C u s l o m s Superviisor Tom Welsh. "but be gets sick from carboo _..,. 1UpUV1sion, •• JI.Id one omcer. TndltleMI a.. ........... ..... ytrtnDJ ,.... " ,.,. " ... tB Enaeoada and San FeU~ ill .. Calilornla. · "It II quite likely the locreue Is due to marijuana." said RJchard Sweet, A.me11caD vice C'OllJ.W in Tijuana, nottn& many younpters have lbc •lw"w IM' cn11b1• u&lva JI llpl ..... . "We are expectlnf quite • roarlnl weekend.•• ht ~. expl.alninf .Ut Le Mesa Ptilttlentiary, Enle_..,, grim, reddish jail facility . Is already jammed with marijuana oUenders. Customs Officer Richard Fartel 1alcl MeU&n sut.bontia U"t buttnc ..., ................. in- ........... I • ••h•IY ....... Tbelr bands. bowever. will cwtalnly be run wta the ordinary. cfeancut users of the llailucinogeolc wted, Who may try to bring borne .;me in- toxicatioa Mexican-~le fa, fabare use. Jr/ Frone Pqe , SCHOOL CHIEF Hayward for five years. la fletive in the community. He is a dir.Eof the BA)"ward Chamber ol tree. board member ol the Ba .Area Boy Scouts. a.nd vict presi~ of the Northern California lnd~try-Educa­ tion Council. He was named "Outsti8d.int Boss·• by the Hayward Junior Piamber of Commerce &Dd "Boss of tk Year" bv the American Busineti Women .-s Association. ' He said be bas bf!en in "a little bit (If everything" and is look.in!a forward to becoming activ~ in the community w e.. Several Newport-Mesa school board members visited Hlyw.ird to review his perrorrnaoce before making the job offer . READY FOR BALLOT BATTLE -More than 160 precinct workers pack Newport Beach City Council chambers for last-minute instruc- tion on polling station duties. Session, held SatW"day, had biggest turn- lilt ever, according to City Clerk Laura Lagios. Workers watched a mock election board in action. Its members included former Mayor James B. "Jay" Stoddard and beautification leader Isabel Pease. "We are favorably unpressed with the rapport he has developed with thE' business community. parents and staff in Hayward." board president Dont1ld Strauss said. f'rotta Pa.ge J ODOR. • • old casing. possibly through sl~nt drill· mg. DESIGN SYSTEM City ManageT Harvey L. Hurlburt said a petroleum engineer would not only design m detail the anU--Odor system. based on Zebal's .>uUlned sug- gestions, but would pinpo.int the cost. "Even at $30,000," he sale!, "I think It would be wo~h every cent paid by the city. Land values In West Newport would certainly go up. and I know the city would recoup everything It has In- vested. There is. of course. no way to esLima~ the good will value." Hurlburt noted that the gas seepage problem is such that service stations in the area must close early at night because of the smell. "I'm sure they might be agreeable to helpin~ on the expense.·· He said there are other possible fund soun:es. among them state <(visions of highways and oil and gas; the Cooperative Oil ProduceTs' Associa· Uon: utility companies and local sanitation districts. Hurlburt was instructed to contac t thest agencies. find a petroleum engineer and report baclc In about 30 days. City AU~rney Tully Seymour in- dk ated that whatever is done. and wherever the money comes from . it isn·~ ikely that a neighborhood assess· ment Jistrict would be formed. "I doubt that an assessment district would do the trick." he said. Councilmen appeared to go alo.n~ with that view. "It's a city-wide pro· blem.'' said Howard Rogers Virgil Howell. president of the Balboa Coves Community Association. was in the audience and liked what he heard. "We're most grateful to Mr. Zebal and the city." he said. Councilmen made it plain they were grateful to Zebal. too. "You should get a special award of some kind.'' said Lindsley Parsons. "A vast amount of work went into this report. and it will stand as a landmark solution to the pToblem for a long, long time." said Mayor Paul J . Gruber. "'\'le're just amazed." aid Vier Mayor Doreen Mar&hall. Al forgit asked Zebal why he volunteered to do all the research and investigation the study requ ired. "I'm horribly conservative,'' thr ge<>logist s m i I e. ''I just thought here is one way I could do some- thjng for local government. and help hold down the tax rate. t feel If many others did this kind of thin~. we might be itble to slice taxes In half." Public Works Director Joseµh T Devlin noted that Zebal had saved tht city -and 7.ebal's feUow taxpayers - ''thousand11 of dollars." CATV •.• Baysbores. Lido Sands. Newport Shores. Balboa Cons. Newport Island. Linda Isle. Harbor Isle. Estimated completion by Ocl l. l~ltt -Pbase !: Eastbluff. Bucnn Bay. lrvlne Terrace. Corona del Mar. Shore Clilrs. Corona Highlands. Cameo Shores. Cameo Highlands Completion by Jan. l. 1988. -Phue I : Balboa blRnd. Collins Isle. Udo Penimula. Lido lllf. Com· pletion bJ April 1. 1968. -PllHe •: Newp ort· Ba Ibo 1 Penlneula. IMly Isle. Completion bJ Ju· ty 1. 1981. FlllM l>IVEkSD"IES Foote, Cone and Beldlnt ls entertnc the CA TV field. councilmen were told, ln order to diversity. C A TV aubsldiariea are already 1trvln1 -J?~lt. N. Y •nd Pueblo., ColL Mon symm arw 011 ttw-bovdl. Ntwport subscrlbtn will PIY I SIU& lnatallation ch•rre for the ftrsl Mesa, Newpo-.-t Tangl,e Over SA Heights Annex Newport Beach and Costa Mesa meet head-on Wednesday in an an- nexation batUe over key acreage in the Santa Ana Heights area. -t:.· -tr tr Moden Residents To Vote May 21 On Annexation Residents of a 56-acre patch of coun· ty territory near Costa Mesa wi\I vote May 21 on whett\er to join the city of Nt.wport Beach or remain unannexed. Newport councilmen unanimously agreed Monday night to the election date The so-cal!ed Moden Annexation aru would bring about Sl million in assessed valuation into the city. Plan- • nin1 officials told councihMn Ulat the area would carry its own weight as r.:r as the COil o( city services is con- cerned. J111t under 500 people live tn the Back Bay area. which has 129 homes. most ranging in values from $30.000 to 063,800. The territory lies between Tustin and Irvine avenues, Crom about 20tb strel't lo 22nd street 'l'wo overlapping annexlllion pro- posa~ will be hear11 be,umlng at 2 p.m. before the Local Agency Forma- tion Commission (I.AFC). but the real prize is the 228-acre McDonnell Douglas industrial parcel Wt!st of ttie Orance County Airport. Tbe city that wins could reap a rich tax barves< in years to come. estimated at about $115,000 annually at today's prices. Coeta Mesa fll'ed the flrst gun in the lengthy battle tn February when it st.ated proceedings to annex a 7.3-acre strip bordering Palisades Road on tbe south and stretching eastward into the area south o( the airport. This would effective\)' block any fulLie meraer moves by Newport in that sea lf apprond by the I.AFC. Newport shot back with a 131-acre annex.aUoa propoaa1 in the same .area. encompassing 280 ctftlliBg unUs in the Heigbta aree eut o( the Santa Ana Country Club. Newport oflic.Ws woo one skirmish when they rece.ived a letter from a McDonnell Dou&las offtclally opposing Costa Mesa's move "at this time." An unsolicited testimonial followed trou. County Planning Director F<>n!st Oien.on who suuested tMt any an· nexation move ln the area was pn!mature at this time. Officials of both cities are expected to fire their big guns Wednesday when the afternoon he1Ting begins. FrOtll P•e J FILLS CRITERIA VOTING ... Dr Cunningham fills all tbe criteria trustees set down for selecting a superintendent. He holds a doctorate in education from Columbia Uruvers1· ty, has been superintendent of two -DUtriet 7: Lindsley Parsons. ID· unified school dilitricts. and has t.sught ctunben.t: _Donald Andrews Bolton. lo-on both the elemeot.ary and.s~aty cal b~sman. . . , level. . Most of the a~tion lD today s elec· "' In addition. he llas taught graduate ~oa appears di.te.ct.ed ~l the races in courses in education. finance, law, districts 2 and ~-Both 1!'.lcumbents are school and persoonel administration. con~ lo have lhel.1' hands full : Dr. Cunningham 's CUJT<ent salary is Forgit ~au.se he faces two vigorou s, S24,000 per year, but he says he was determIDe:d opponents and Cook. ~-olfet"ed more if be would stay. Only cause he_ is challenged by an aspU'ant one junior rollege district superintend- o( prommence who .has ronducted a ent amoog Orange County schoolmen well-financed campaign. will equaJ rus $30,000 per year. REA VIESI' VOTING The Newport-Mesa board has bten Sttking a superintendent si~ De- ~mber. Applicants were sc~d down to eight by a coosulting com· mittee of prominent educators. The stream of voters to the polls was expected t-0 intensify by late this afternoon, with heaviest voting at abou~ the dinner hour. Veteran pre· cinct official$ said that is the usual P~ure for a Newport election. NB Ad 3 Newport Jo . At City Hall a.ft.er 7 p.m., when the ru:st returns begin trickling , in. City C.erlt Laura Lagios and o t b e r municipal aides will be posting the re.s~ts on • huge board. precinct by precrnct. Customarily, the winners will make an appearance in the Qty Hall lobby which will be open to the public and remain until the last votes are counted. Also on today's ballot are Cola' pro· posed charter· amendment&. Two involve councilmanic districting p r o c e d u r e s and one is a "house~~eping·•· meMtire. 0 n I y Proposition No. 2. coocerning pay for appointive officials, has generated much interest. It is the only amendment that has spLi' ttie City Council. Cook. who voted against its inclusion on the ballot, wrote a minority ugument against it. Dr. Newcomer announced in Novem- ber. shortly after a secood bond elec- tion defeat that he would resij!'n to become president of La Verne College. ~ turned down an earlier La Verne offer prior to the election failure. AW.~RE OF FAILURE Dr. Cunningham said he is aware of the bond fajJum. He said during his term in Hayward the district passer! the only bond issue i,t propoeed. for $13 miloon. receiving 72 pereoeot voter approval. He said growth there ha~ tapered off and hall of the 1963 bood money is still left. The Ha yward racial mixture in- cludes 12 percent Spanish. four per· cent Negro. "and quite a few Irish."' he said. Newcomer. like CunninlU!arn. wa~ an outsider. col'ning from Clark Coun· ty Schools <Las Vegas). Of adminis· trators within the district, Assistant Supt. Dr. Norman Loats had been glven the best chance to succeed New· C1>mer and i~ belie~ to have ~n one of the last three men considered. MINOW EXPECTS 'G REAT DEBATE ' • • • Mule to Draw Body Of King at Funeral agtocles. Durinl the bearing there was a refeNIDCe by a councilman to Minow·~ famed "television is a vast wasteland" remark o( six years ago. MiDow later said. smiling. tha t hr expects the phrMe "vast wasteland .. to follow him to his grave. "I've no regrets about making lhr 'var. wasteland' speech to a con- vent.Ion of broadcasters. because in the context of the times. it was ap- propriate. They needed a jolt. That was ju1t after tht TV quiz scandals. you know. and the whole industry was ~etting complacent. ''But of all the things l've ever donr. I gues~ that wlll wtnd up on rn:-i tombsh>ne. '' Mino•. 42, -"rm getting old" - said that during hls tenure on the FCC there was sometttinl he accomp'ished tttat he ~ comldenbly more proud TV set hook-up: 15 fOT each additional set. Tbe monthty fee will then be 16.50. plus Sl.'7S for an extra aet. An FM service Installation chart, will be 16. Monthly fee will be Sl. AU achooll. public libraries. polil'" 1nd flr"f 1tatk>f'• and hotipltAI! will ~ leT'Wd. free for o~ outlet. and wUI hf' charged at cost for labor anrt m1t.rtal1 for additional outlets. Councilmen. ln approving th t Newport. Cablevlaion Dfoject, rejected 1 an apPUcation froll\ 1otm Perl, presi- dent of Data VW.O Syatem1. a NortlMd Calllonde CATV tlrm. 1"be d~ ttatf 8ChiMd tbe council that Pni I proposal. at bett. was no improvement over the N e w p o r t Cablt\>Jalon pla11. Pm said he could do nerythiftf Newpor1 Cablemioll could & . ~ But ~. c.te and Be1dlq's bet- tery of tlecvttftt •Oft thf cleci•ioc eutly. J about. but no one ever lalks about It. "I'm never identified with it." he complaioed. only haU In jest. "But I brought about the Sl coast-to~ast telephone call after 1 p.m. It used to be '1.75, you lo.ow. The dollw long dis~e call went into effect in 1963. But nobody ever talks about that. and people are calling coast~roast all the timt." . Minow puffed thoughtfully on a cigar. "I think tonight's meeting went pretty well. IThe city council ap- proved his firm's application.) But do your councilmen always vote out In the open like that?"' ATLANTA IUPll -The mttle that will draw the body of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in his funeral pro· cession todey ca.me to Attanta during the night in the back of a truck. The rnllle. Ada, is owned by Ed Peek of Clayton. Ga. He uses her for plow· ing hll fields. THI UL TIMA Tl In CARPET CLEANING THIS UNIQUE NEW PROCESS CLEANS DEEP AND YET TlEA TS THE FINEST CARPETS WfTH LOVIN& CARE ... .., IT1AM -................. ., "" ...,., ... ... ..,.. .................................. .... ................. ., ............. .c::':: ... ~ ............ ,..,... ....... ,_) ... ..... ............ -"....-;:•1 n...., .. ........ tr di.......... .............,lt11f1I .. ........ .................................. ...... ... • THIS Dll' STEAM PltOCISS IS GUARANTllO TO II C~f.TILV SAFI OH ALL l'AUtCS UNDlll ALL COHDtTIOHS. WHIN YOU WANT THI "'"'"-CALL RUG • UPHOLSTIRY CLEANas , ... ISTtMATI Our 21st YHr of 5-Yice in the Orenge County encl lon9 hach ArNJ 2950 RANDOLPH COSTA MISA ---.... J -. ----·---··" ·---· ·--·-·-· . -------W'lzc@ •• zC ... 19 Years E~rly Kimberly Covert, 2-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Covert, has the right idea as municipal elections sprout today all over the Orange Coast. She may be 19 years early at the polls and her vote may not count, but at least she gol there. Did you? Burglar Bargain Basket Contains Lad y "Grocer A Santa Ana woman grocer 1s in satisfactory condition today afttr )ein shot by a h-0ldup man Sunday night. Police are looking for the bandit who may himseU have been shot by the grocer's son. Mrs. Connie Graves. 41. owner of Connie's Market, 419 N. Euclid St., wr s shot in the left shoulder by the gunman during a struggle which raged throughout the store. She told pollce she was alone in the store when the robber, described as a Mexican-American ID his early 20s, entered. .. He approached me from behind and tapped me on the shoulder," Mrs. Graves told police. "When I turned around . he hit me in the face and we began to hght." The gun went off du ring the struggle and the bandit scooped about Sl.000 from the cash reg1s:er as he ran from the store. Mrs. Graves' husband. Robert, and their son, Gary. 21. who had been ID the front parking lot, gave chase. , I I \ MEWPORT • 61,000 Troops Deployed To Curb Racial Violence • By BOB MONROE Associated Preas Wrltt'r Some 61.000 National Guardsmen and Army troops were de!,loyed in the nation's trouble-wracked cities today to ct.irb the spasms oC violence that havr shaken the urban centers since the death o( Dr. Martin I uther King Jr. An additional 1.900 federal troops dispatched to Baltimore Monday helped hold a steadily tightening grip on !tie city today. Fires and lootinl? diminished but an outbreak of sniping a deed new worry . Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes sent some 1.800 guardsmen lo Cincinnal.J v ;d Youngstown as th~ two cities were addrd to the growing list of areas hit by racial turmoil. In Cincinnati a while colle~e teacher was dragged rrom his cc.r and stabbed lo death Monday night at the height ot noting m Sf Ver al Negro sections of the cit\. The rlcath brought t..i 28 lhe numbt'r • of known dead in five day~ of rioting in rlozcns of cities. All but four of thr dead were Negroes. More than 1.f,00 have been injured and more than 10.hOL arrested. The death toll included 11 in \.hicago, 6 in Washington, 5 in Baltimore, 2 in the Detroit area and one each in Cincinnati, Minneapolis, Memphis and Tallahassee, Fla. Relative calm existed today in Chicago, Pittsburgh and Washington with heavy troop patrols enforcing the uneasy peace. Arrests for curfew villlations soared i:i the nation's capital. The nationwide deployment oC 61.000 troops was apparently the largest such force ever turned out for a civ1I emergency ir. the Umted States. Baltimore police said they had con- firmed five stparate smping inc1denl!I Monday night at locations around the heart of the div. No one was hit. rt was the first ou.tbreak since the start of burmnl? anrl loollnJ! Sunday. • ...,.._ Tu~. APttl CJ, 1968 DAILY PllOT :J uakeShaliesArea Strains Nerves, Causes Little Damage A moderate, rolling earthquake centered in rugged San Diego County mountain') shuddered throug)l the Southland Monday nlght. rattling win- dows and nerves but essentially caus- inR only minor damage. Police and fire de!Jartment swit· chboarda In most Orange Coast cities were clogged with calls by worried ritizens. but others missed the 6:29 to 6·31 p.m. shocks entirely. An estimated 1, million residents of Southern California, Nevada. Arizona and portions of Mexico felt the quake, which caused some degree of damage Ln many of those areas. Power poles toppled over I n lmperial County. disrupting light and telephone service, and broken win- dows and power failures also were reported in spotty areas of Sao Diego County. A number of Southlanders com- plained of a mild, nausea similar to seasickness. High rise buildings in L-Os Angeles and Las Vegas swayed gently, slop- riing the contents o( glasses clutched by shaken cocktail hour lounge customers. Water in most swimming poolc; lhroughout the affected area sloshed around and several homeowners said their pools were cracked by the double jolL The Monday night temblor that ~hook lhe Orange Coast s;ave John Fries, manager oC Laguna Liquor. 2411 F'orest Ave., a "queasy feeling'' as he thought of his rocking stock. He was h11me at the time. But, he reported happily today, •·we didn't lose a bottle." - The Ion~. easy. crockery-rattling quake shook up coastal residents. but apparently did no damage. This was the report 0£ La~11na'!\ rleparlment oC public works and the Laguna Brach Counly WatE'r District. William Moorehrad, water district Attt·css Suffers l(idney Ailment Aclt·css June Allysor. of Lido Isle has been admitted to Hoag Memorial ..,ospltal. where she is undergoing tests for a kidney ailment. Miss Allyson's phy<;1cian. Or . .losrph R1m·h, said today her condJtion 1s sat.u;factory and the hospitalization I' nol of an emergency naturP. The actress' hui-band, Glenr. Max· WE'ii. said ht~ w1IP <;11flrrs from a kulney !'lone. whirh w<1~ dta~nn,Prl H.n £ time aj!o. mauager. said the system appeared to be totally mtact. Commenting that it was ··a go(ld big shake'' that caused concern, he said the fact that it was a gentle earthquake rather than a sharp jolt had apparently prevented damage. Police received esveral mqu1r1e\ after the shake but i;a1d no one reported damage. In Stanton. a liquor store owner lia1d tt.e quake sn:;pped supports of a wa!I •. in cooler shelf, sending 15 cases of hot- tied beer crashing into a foamy waste. HIGHWAY SLID A rock slide sent ton:. or rarth 0 tumbling down and across · ate Highway 74 between Palm Desert ;nd ldyllwild. temporarily closmg the roadway. Dr. Charles Richter, inventor of thP scale which measures quake 1ntcns1ty. checked hi s instruments al lhe Califorina Institute of Technology in Pasadena and described the jolt 6 moderate. "If the quake had been centered in & populous area," he said, "there would have been severe damage." The magnitude was &pproximately 6 ori the R:chter scale and was the i;harpest jolt to joggle the Southland sl11cP 1952. when 7.: was registered in the Tehachapi earthquake. noZEN KlLLED A dozen persons were killed and pra- JX rly damage was heavy in that t~mblor. The San F'rancisco earthquake of 1906 registered 8,3, and killed 452 persons. The disastrous Long Beach earth· quake oC March 10, 1933, which killed 5C. people , was about the same in· tensity c;s Monday's earthquake, but local.ton mad'! the difference. L-Ong Beach residents felt tile roc:C· ing quake throughout the city and workmen sandblasting the underside of the giant liner Queen Mary in dry· dock al the Naval Shipyard the.re went scrambling for their lives. Altern~tes Weighed U.S., North Vietnani Studying Talks Sites THtJ'RMONT, Md (AP)-President .Johnson · said today the United States ic; in touch with North Vietnam abo11t alternative sites which could be con- venient to both sides for pN!hminary peace talks. "We arc In agreement with 11ur alltcs," .Johnson added. "and are pre· pared for ambassadorial contH<'ls Jllli l as soon as arrangements can be com- pleted " .Johnson :-.rokc to newsmen lmr!lv afler a b;·eakiast conference with F:llsworth Bunker, U.S. aml>assmlor to South Vietnam. and other srnior advisers at Camp David nea r lhts town of 3.000 persons. ,Johnson disclosed Monday an olli· cial response from Hanoi to his bid for direct contacts to gel talks goin:! hetween the opposing sides in lhe Vietnam war. The l"nited States origtnall:v prn· posed Geneva as the place for U S. and North Vietnamese envoys to ~Pl lol(ether. while Nor1h Vietnam pro· posed Phnom Penh, thP capital of Caml>odia. .Johnson dirt not d1sclO!>P what all<'r· native places the United Stat.es had suggested to Hanoi in the new U.S. exchange with North Vietnam. Bunker, who arrived this morning at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., outside the nation's capital, flew by helicop- lcr to the camp. He was accompanied by Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Sec· retary of Defense Clark M. Clifford, and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler. chair· man or the Joint Ctiiefs of Staff. In announcing the meeting Monday, .Johnson disclosed the receipt of a rormal reply from Hanoi to his ex- pressed willingness to undertake preliminary diplomatic contacts with representatives of that Communist rci::irnc ''We i;hall be lrymg." he said, "to work out promptly a time and a place tor talks." Hy lalk~. Johnson dJd not mean a full-~calc peC1ce parley. Hanoi thus far has signaled thal its initial interest is 1n ga1nm.C? a promise that the United State~ wilt halt uncrnditionally all hombing of North Vietnam "and all other arl!\ of war" agc.mst that coun- lr:-i. ' REPEAT OF A SELLOUT! • • Color-glorious washable nylon knits only 6 • 9 9 reg. 15.00 to 20.00 Don't be misled by the tiny price! These are eomparable to tfle best1 in nylon knit dresses. Summer-brilliant prints are hand-screened! on textur ized nylon jersey. Cool to wear ••• packable forl travel. They machine wash and dry like a dream. You'll want se~rall -___ ... Accessory Sho11 u umS' MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 ~ • Ollt!I DAYS 10:tl11.Ls.JI \, \ · I The Western United States will be represented by Stephani• Hol- lintshead, 17, a senior at Cleveland High School in Reseda, in the Miss Teen U.S.A. contest. Wendy H•r- ris, 18. of Arcadia, was named first runnerup and Wanda Evans, 17, of Los Angeles was second runnerup. Stephanie was chosen from 3_0 fi- nalists at the Hollywood Palladium. • TutSday, April CJ, 1968 LBJ Speech I On 'Unrest' Postponed WASHINGTON (UPI) -President John&on will not ~liver hi! apecla1 ad- dress on racial unrest until aft.er East.er -if at all -although his CivU Rights Bill could be way1.a.ld ln the House this w e e k , Congressional le~rs said Monday. (See related story Page 6) The president had been scheduled to addreu a joint session of Congress Mooday night. but postponed it unUJ aft.er the funeral of Dr. Martin Luther King today. Congress will receaa for East.er on Thursday. The speech. In wb.ich Jobnlon was e~pected to urge prompt approval of the Civil RigbU pack'age, new spen· ding for ttie nation's troubled cities, and possibly additional laws to curb racial unrest, was not re$cheduled. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said Monday the joint ad- dress "may come alter Easter. If at all." He added that jf the PresiJent wants such an address, "we'll have one, but I don't think we should rush into it ... we should see . bow things develop around the country ... be a little more stn'e of what we're doing." Se•re• Espanded -Dkl King'S-Killer __ _ Flee tile Country? MEMPHIS. Tenn. (UPI) -1be UIUlin of Dr. Martin Luther Kina Jr. may have fled the country, ac· cording to indication.a today. The FBI has uked Mexican authorittea to aid in the search. A police spokesman in Mexico City said Monday that a drawing of tbe swspect, a compos1t1J of descriptions by persona who saw the white sniper ln the Memphil rooming house from where King was abot. has ~n tliatribut.ed throughout Maico ud 11t border crossing ~ The Mexican spokesman refused to divulge any further lnfOrmation. "There i11 an lnvestigatio11 going on, that is all we can aay," he said. U.S. Atty. Geo. Ramsey Clark. in Wash.ingtoo. said Monday the ''trail has lengthened" since Fl'iday. the day after King slumped to bis death on i. motel balcony with a gaping rifle bullet wound in bis neck. The FBI has ''one man on the run." Clark said. "We have a name. but whether it is the right name remains to be seen. "We hope he'U be under arrest quite soon. The focus is sharpening and we are quite close. we think, but that depends on how some of the leads we have develop.•· replied. and kept walk.Ing to bla room. Dw'lng the confuak>n, be left the roomlllf bouae, dumped the wtapon - a 30-08 Remington pump rlfl&-and a suitcase in a nearby anruaement t.>eoter. got into a car and "j\llt faded away." Judge Refuses To Let Brown Out of Lockup RJCHMOND. Va. (UPI) -A federal judge refused Monday to re~" Black Power advocate H. Rap Brown from jail despite the pleas of a.n at· tvrney that "it might help tbe situation nationally." Judge Rotert R. Merhige Jr. said he would rule today 011 whether to grant Brown a preliminary bearing. M311sfield added. "it would be better for our members lo go home and find out what people are thinking ... give the House a chance to work its will on the Civil Rights Bill and for our com· mittees to report O\lt other legisla- ti ., on. There was no official e.xplanation for the delay -or eventual cancellation of the speech -but it was speculated that the joint address could not be worked in because of the tTUsb of Con- WEDDING DELAYED -Pop singer Mark Wynter points to where be was seated when the BOAC Boeing 707 crash landed at Heathrow Airport in Loniion Monday. Wynter used the emergency chute to escape be.fore the wreckage exploded into names. In the crash which took the lives of 5 of 126 persons aboard, Wynter received hand and foot injuries. He was on his way to Australia to get married. The assassin was described by the landlady who rented him a room the day of the staying as a man with a sharp nose. square chin. bla ck hair receding on the sides, and "a silly smile ... He is about six feet tall and between 26 and 32 years old, witnesses said. Bpown, head of the Student Non- violent Coordinating C o m m i t t e e ISNCC), is being held under revoked bc.n<' in a federal cell. pending his fight lo keep from b e i n g returned to Maryland to face arson and riot charges. Merhige denied two motions by ' Brown's attorney, William Kunstler of New York, that Brown be released. Police said he .,.as cool #nd quick-M,ri. JeTry Shrimpton i& O™J auburban hoWiewife who i3 finding out the In· dians knew what they wen dorng whe11 it came to toting a papoose. Mrs. Sltrimpton goes about her marketing In Lmcroft, N.J .• with her youngsteT ptoperly bpck·packed. siooal ~ in the fmal hows ~re recess. There was also speculation that Johnson. following the wave of racial violence ttiat was triggered by King's murder. might have decided such an addrw might be iDte1 pret.ed in IOnle quarters as a reward to rioters and had decided to cancel lt. There was no cooune11t from the White Ho\l.9e. Pop Singer AfJoard acting. • ~ He bad less than 24 hours. after he beard and read that King was staying in the Lorraine Hotel (King had stayed in another motel on a visit the previous week), to choose a site and make preparations for the ass.assina· tion. "It is important for all our states. during this time in history, that Rap Brown be released on bond." Kunstler said "It would hurt nobody. It might hel p the situation nationally." • 'Cool' Boeing Pilot Cited Kunstler then askt~ for a preliminary bearing. saying Brown could not get a fair trial in MMy1and an< that his lile would be in danger. Rev. Allen T•ylor advertised re- cenUy ln his church magazine, ·'Two puppies for aale. The result of a clandestine love aUair between my female Beagle and a local La~ rador Retriever. The sinful hound is now forgiven.'' Indiana Death Toll Reaches 43; 5 M~sing In Landing Crippled Jet He chose a '"flophouse " across the street from the Lorraine. apparently not because it offered any better view than several other buildings in the area, but because it was closer. The fatal shot traveled 205 feet. three in- ches from the communal bathroom. where the killer stood In a grimy bathtub to take aim. to the balcony where King was standing. Brown was brought to Virginia dur- ing the weekend from a New Orleans jail. Kunstler argued three motions before Merb.ige, all of them involving Brown's attempt to avoid extradition to Cambridge. Md .. where he faces chr.rges of arson a.nd inciting to riot during a demonstration last July. • The Baltimore and Ohio and f'hesapeake and Ohio Railroads 11!anned to halt all their trains for 1.~c minute at 10:30 a.m. today dur- 1 1g the funeral of Dr. M.rtln Lu- ··, .. r King Jr. • Southern Padfic's "Lark," o symbol of the era of luxurv t1'ain travel. ended 58 years of aenrice Monday between Los Angele• and San Franci$co. The final trip carried 177 passengers. double the numbe1 carried at one time on the Lark in recent years. • A Columbia University grad•1ate ·tudent, writing his master's thesis on the subject of narcotic laws, is getting some intimate knowledge of how the law works. Melvyn Gr .. n, 24, of Ottawa, was held on $8,000 bail today after being ar· r~sted by federal narcotics agents who picked him up when he alleg· edly accepted a package mailed f r o m Calilornia containing 18 pounds of marijuana. RICHMOND, Ind. (UPI) -1\ie death toll reached at least 43 today In one al Indiam's wont diauters. a miPt7 aploldoa and Ire which flat. tened a broad acea ol RJchmond'a hunsc district Saturday. Audlcrities identified 38 of the 43 bodies recovered. They 11a1d the mnnber of persons missing and feared dead was reduced to five. Barring ttie discovery of bodies of persoM not listed as missing. it ap- peared the final death coont would be' less than 50. ~Byron E. Klute end other city officials went to Washington to explore with federal officials the prospects for aid for merchants whose businesses were destroyed or damaged . 111e AillerWan Red Cross 1ald a report oo the disaster completed this morning showed 10 b u i I d i n ~ s destroyed, 30 others damaged con· siderably, and 150 or more with lesser damage, mainly shattered windows . 1'be .-rch for bodies resumed this maming at the Marting Arm! Sporting Goods store area. where the first ex· plosion is believed to have occurred. Searchers believed that by late today they will have completed ttie &ifting of debris for bodies. LONDON (UPI) -In the late af- ternoon Monday a jinxed Boeing 7ff7 airliner named "Whisky Echo" swept wide over a heavily populated area near London's Heathrow Airport. its left wing blazing. Hundreds on the groWld watched in horror For tbe 126 persons aboard the atrcraft, the emotion was infinitely worse. ''The fll'lt thing I got into my head wu 'oh God, please don't end everything!", British pop singer Mark Wynter recalled. Wynter and 120 other persons on the plane still lived today. Their survival was creditK to a cool New Zealander, Pilot Charlfl Taylor. 47. who set the big plane down on the airstrip after one of It! engines feU off into a gravel pit. A stewaroeu and four passengers were killed. Another airline pilot marveled at the feat of 'l\a.ylor. a World War Il Royal Alr Force pilot who once flew Queen Elizabeth. "It was like a motorist heading down a highway at 100 miles an hour and having to steer h.is car safely while hall of It was in flames an<1 it kept skidding from side to side ... Taylor's colleague said. F~ erupted in a port engine of the British ~rteu Airways Corporation CBOAC) craft shortly afteT it took off on a fllgtit to Atlltralia. The engine fell off five miles from the airport. Earth Shaking Weather Mercury to Continue Upward Spiral C•Hfornln • • More sunny, l>of we41~r l• In ""'~ tor $ou1Mrn C.llfoml1 Wednellld• etter Tund•v's 1Mtrr1M ~ oun•hl,,. The W~llMf~ 1><.0lelecl A h~~ fbi' )!'e<1nffdn "' •• Oetrttt. down • t.-, dt11rMI from T~Y'l pred~lod •lfl> of 90. Tiie low Wec!MSdlY wlll .., 1 IMtlmv '1 $un)hfne IOnd """'"' weo~r blti..., ~~ Califoml• tod<tv. wllll 1 hi9h ,..., to tor9att •I ""' Len .,...,., t lvic c ... 1 .. Mondff• "'-" .... dlftf ....... ..., h -fllerman prt!cflcltd ~ _,cu,., _.., canll,,... 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As the plane was still rolling to a halt. crewmembers put out 4!$C8pe chutes and sent passengers sliding dowr them. After the slaying, the assassin walk· ed down a hallway and encountered the man who occupied a room next to his. , ''Was that a shot?" asked the roomer. "Yes, it was." the killer cooly Merhige refused to reconsider his revocation of the Sl0.000 bond Brown was ordered to pay for violatin5 a re- quirement that he remain in the New York City area pending an appeal of his extradition to tbe 4tll U.S. Circuit Co\U't of Appeals. • 1n a We'd invite you to cM<k ow .-s agolfllf COf'llpetition <-'d fore~ nicely, thonlc you). bvt that's too "'udi like homework. And yo.>'ve got enough of thcrt. lnsteod, slip into this low.slung, low.priced youngmobil.-and let Cutlass S do the teoching. <JulM it. Comer it. lroke It. ll'ork It. Tilis OM ........ it hod-..... Anet tf'9 beet part ii the C....._ S ~ It's OS Jfnlomfjnecf ot ltt ~. Hkf .. away wipws. louver~ llood, tide market' lights, oil the new GM tofety feafures-oll ttondord. Todoy. S.. ~ Oldt deolet'. T0night. Cut loote In Cutfou. " • • ... Drive o yoti\gi.:obae fran<>ldsmobile I • r: -·-- Cllllm Is lll CAI II TB TIME U.S.A. 111 Aa*il Conllflol Clllllr, 11 •w "'°"' April 1 l .. v ---------------.. -... ---- :E 0 s J. 0 d II t r t p ( l f ~ • \ E ~ ' J .. - • f Humphrey Remains Calm I In Center of Political Storm T~, April 9, 1968 . . . ..... ----DAll. Y PILOT 5 LSD Users Do Suffer Damages WASHINGTON CUPn - For a man who is ttie center of 19S8's latest political storm, Vice Pr e s i d e n t Hubert H. Humphrey is outwardly a model of calm deliberation. to make a sbowiog lo presidential pr i m a r 1 e s • which are the costly feature of the ~veotion period. His pit.ch would have to be made through state COG· ventioos and "favorite &On" primary candidates. spearheaded efforts beblacl LOS ANGELES (UPil - s u c b 1 a n d m a r k LSD users are apt to suffer a.chlevements u UWI JIM genetic damage, but it has Civil RJg.bts Act and the 1983 not been e s t a b l i s h e d Nuclear Test Bao Treaty. whether they will produce In early 1960, there wasn't abnormal or r e t a r d e Cl U the 56-year-old Min· nesotan decides to go af.ter the Democratic pl'esidential nomination, it will be no lm· petU-OUS action. R umphrey ha~ been seasoned by political heartbreak, in other yers. in ottier storms. much doubt that he was bet· children, a New Y o r k t.er informed on most ls6ues geneticist said today. PARTY SERVICE He would have to count on loyalties and his kmg record of party strvice, and he would have t~ work on his than candidates John F. Dr. Kurt Hirschorn, or ML Kennedy or Lyndon B. Sinai School of Medicine. Johnson or stuart Sym· said genetic injuries brought on by LSD resemble those ington, but bis presidnetlal caused by exposure to hopes died when Kennedy radiation. Few ol his friends expect him to make a late start in a field already occupied by Sens. Robert F. Kennedy and Eugene J. McCarthy unless ht has significant evidence lof party backing. Some of that support bas already s.irfaced, more is likely. NEWS ANALYSIS money and charm beat him The injuries consist of in the West V i r g i n i a breaks. rearrangements or primary. Humphrey con· fragmentati ons of ceded gracefully and work· chromosomes. the chains of own image, gently disengag- ing himself where po&sible £rom associ.ation with the "tired" look tllat m3fly young voters apply to the Johnson administration. ed for Kennedy in the fall genetic material by which campaign. living things i n h e r i t characteristics from their INCONGRUITY parents. One of tile incoogruitles Hlrscbom said re cent about Humphrey's situation ftea6a...a 40 ~et RefurL..! ML -d Ul'I T•l•llM!t studies of LSD users showtd NOT ENOUGH Not m a o y candidates could match Humphrey for energy, zest and balance. He proved 1'hat during his whirlwind January goodwill trip lo Africa. when he visited nine countries in 11 days. is that major support. at ~~~•• Si U .,. .. "•~ that three quarters of them this stage, would be comin~ had suifered chromosome But il Sill might not be enoogti. Humphrey would probably ~ve to make his !igh.t wit.rout much open political assistance Crom President Johnson. to him from Dixie. The old The seagoing royal m onarch Queen Mary rests Beach convention center and tourist attraction. damage. A separate study "red.hot liberal," wbo likes proudly on blocks in the huge Long Beach Naval Among other things, she'lt have three of her four of 18 children of L.5D takers to remind college audiences Shipyard's drydocka today where she'll spend six 11 d showed damaged genes in now of his rebel days, once prope ers remove and 94 hull openings closed. half of them. although the Th\1$ 4ht question comes down to trus : S h o u 1 d Humphrey 1-tand like a lat· ter-d.ay 1-bratio at t h e political blidge if there are not many willing to stand with him? People with con- vention 4elegates a n d money, th.a is. was anathema to SOu~ern __ w_e_e_k_s_be~in_g__,~~a_diedt_·~_fo_r~h-er~n_ew~r_o_le~a_s_a~Lo~n~g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~c~hi:'l:dr~e:n~we:.::.re~no:rm'...'..:.::a:l.:.._~ Democrats. th=li~~·~sio~n~~: by" if the poll results Crom the big V<>l!l·rich ind ustriaJ states deny him support? Should '8 offer p r o • Johnson ~mocrats from the Sooth ai "eseape" fiom Geocge C. \'allace? COUNTER PURPOSE Wha t about the He sh-Owed his composure during his recent Mexico Ci· ty visit. when the news of J ohnson's withdrawal ex· ploded from Washlllgton. Sen. Wayne L. Morse (D. Ore.) a critic of t h e President's Vietnam policy who was with Humphrey, said the vice president cLid a superb job of carrying oul his mission despite his sadness over J o b n s o n ' s de<:ition. Long before bis party's disunity ove.r Vietnam im· pelled the President to decide against a second term. Humphrey bad pie· lured himsell as being at peace with ambition and determined to ~udge most issues by: "Does it satisfy my conscience.'' President's ~wn declaraiton that he is $lnding aside in the interestbf party and na- tional unit)f 1f Humphrey picked ui..tn. administration cause -onVietnam. for in-SATISFACTION 6tance -wt.tld that counter Humphrey can look back Johfl600's )lll'pOse? at his political and The comhg days must legislative record w i t h provide the answers. r'or salisfacti<>n. the vice praident would be Bobby Kennedy had just " starting btlind. all<I in received his H a r v a r d desperate 111ed of time and diploma al 22 when assistance. Humphrey. then mayor of A break •ward peace in Minneapolis. shook up hjs Vietnam -as now appears party as a liberal fighting -could m.ke a big dif· for a strong civil rights ference. Bw political plans p la n k at the 1948 cannot be laid on mere Philadelphia convention. He hopes or exJ?ctations. won election to the Senate More impf'tallt are com· that November. mitrnents. oiganization and , G~e McCarthy was a financing. Humphrey understudy and a Since Jorusoh has Jet the Minnesota delegata at that D e m o c r at i c P a r t y convention. McCarthy was machinery ~ untended for elected to the House in the himsell. it has bec<nne same Truman upset victory creaky for atyone represen· which scored for Humphrey. ting his admnistration. · As Senate Democratic M u c h tr e·co1wention whip, Humphrey was an ex- money alretly has been pert oo foreign policy, civil drawn off b> Kennedy and rights, disarmament McCarthy. 1 um p hr e y nuclear and conventional - would be stating too late agriculture and politics. He The vice president, born May 27, 1911, in Wallace, S. D .. was educated in South Dakota schools. won a pharmacist's degree from the Denver College o r Pharmacy, graduated from the University of M'1ru1esota and earned his master's degree at Louisiana State University. Later he taught political science at Macalaster col· lege aiter service in war production operatioos i n Mmnesot.a. Johnson tapped him as his runrung mate in 1964, alter Democrats in many states had made it clear they favored Humphrey for the No. 2 spot on the ticket. McCarthy, apparently en· couraged to th.ink he might be in the running at the D e m o cratic convention, removed himself from con· sideration when it became obvious Humphrey bad been Johnson's choice all along. UCI Grads To Organize Graduates of 1966 and 1967, the first two classes at UCI, are organizing an alumni association. Alan Albri£ht, class of '67. has been named chairman pro tern of the steering com- mittee. Membership applications are being sent to all 210 eligible alumni and pro- spective June graduates. A wlne tastin g party, pie· nlc. and graduation party for the class of '68 are being planned. CEM:Fit:RY ti:>Ts fl MAUSOLEUM CRYPTS From $UO q From $465 rstmittsttr .iltmarial Jark .Mon.an-~ ."ll COMPLETE FUIERALS $245 lncludn C01k.t and aft Mortvory 5-rvleet "E werytlli1g loaated togUher i1 one Mllfiflll 19lace" COURT of HONOR for Veter 'lJns and Their Families Th• new Court f Honor for Vet•rens, and th•ir famili es, is ltOW b•in9 d•v ped .+ w.stminster in bHutiful Guden of Ret'l'l•mbrenc Sp•ciel induc•m•nh to BUY NOW in- clucl• Yer( low p s, +•rmS·H low IS I 0 •;. down with 35 mo. to pay, WITHO INTEREST OR CARRYING CHARGES. lnsuranc• prot•cti111 on the u n p a i d balanc• av1il1ble for everyon• under 6~ yHrJ of aqe. Choice central Hl•ction. \Jnbelieveble low ccat p•r burial spac• • . . $130 per person , • • includes lot ~nd complet• endowment cue. Westminst•r hH •~o mad• 1veilable the Hrvices of Cdr. Claud F. O'He;e, ,sN, Retir•d, as V•t.rans' counselor and servic• officer, witfout cost to thoH he serves. Call or writ•· Cdr. O 'Hare for ctteili . .. ~1--••••••••••••••••••• 1 CD!. C. F. O'HAltA, USN, RET'O V.atminsl•r M•mori ol Park Cemetery 213 .431-6577 I 1 1,801 Beach Blvd. 71'6 531·1752 I I Veatmlnstu, CaliforniQ 92683 71" 893-2-421 1 1 I am l"lmt1'9d In the Veteront' COURT OF HONOI t ' "eaM contod me without obllgotlon on my port 1 ,._.AME ••••.. t ••••••••••••• I •••••••• ._ •••••••••• I I ADDRESS . • . • • • • • • • .... • • • . . . . .•••••••••••••••• I e .......•..•. • • ••...•. TEl NO •....••••••••.. e • ,.• ..•................ ~ .. Familie1 of Vietnlm or other combat area easualf ies 1r• offered our ~,,,. pi.it mortuary jnd cemetery servie11 including burial lot, vault, etc. without cost o1 any ~ind. . ~ " CJi'REE vacation tlas and Guide ~o~l{_ Pick up your FREE copy at any Mutual Savings Office Catalogued and Illustrated by Rand McNally for you! Visit our VACATION TRAVEL EXPOSITION April 1through10, featurin g colorful exhibits and free brochures on exciting vacation attractions in Can· ada, U ni tcd States and Mexico~a:::g15iha SPECIAL ATTRACTION -a Travel Consultant to answer your ques tions regarding any type of travel• cc: 4'1-Our Savings Coun selors will also be happy to hdp you plan future vacation tr:ivel by opening your savings account with Mutual Savings, where you will earn the highest rate on insured savings -and the magic of compound interest will makeyourudream. trip" come true sooner than you think!. ;•£ ti Current interest on savings is 55 per annum com pounded daily and an extra .25% per annum bonus on certificates of $1,000 or more held for 3 years. ~·UT UAL SAVINGS A N O &.DAN A88CJCIATION 2867 East Coast Higliway • CORONA Dn. Em, Calif. 92m • TetephoneQ75.:sotO Jfrad Office: 31S Ea.st Colorado Boor~d • PworNA, Califon:U• 91109 -.Mrs. Gibbins, CoutTMy CO?>llrf9'1 ~tv~ Monday thru Friday 1 :00-2::.1 p.m. C OAll Y PILOT Twesd.ly, April C,, 1968. J.5 MiUion South Vietnamese Haul Of£ Railroad SAJGON (UPI) -South acellent b u t tr. e • a l n I Vietnamese Army soldiers material far Viet C0QC tuQ. aided by police and some Dell. government orDclals ln the MUCH NEEDED northern provinces bave The lmmediate traiedy lJ stolen more than LU mllea that tbe thefts came just as of railroad tracks and equip-the railroad was needed and me.nt valoed al $U million, every effort wu being made it was disclosed today. to "°Pf'4 tt t.o halld.le both The great tl'ain robbery civilian and military cargo included the steel track. lnto the northern provinces. 30,000 steel ties. 21 ex· The roads In the area are pensive switches, railroad tools. railroad car doors, broken down and alrplane.s ix are costly and much In de-iloorboar~ and ligbti.ng f · · mand for troop movement tmes. It ,, .. the 102·mlle stretcb Govermnent offtclala said ol railroad between the s~ Vletnamese Anny soldiers ply bMe of Da Nanc and the did most of the stealina with norlhenlmOl't railway sta· an assist ln at lust one area tion at Dong Ha which of· from Vletnamese dvil and ficials wanted opened to military police. train traffic as soon as T h e thievery occurred pos~le. 1bortly after the Communist Prior to the thefts, the line Tet otfenaive in three of the could bave been opened fair· northernmost provinces of ,ly rapidly, with a minimum Soulll Vietnam -Quang of repair work on bridges TTl Quang Tin and Quang damaged by the Viet Cong. Ng~!. It happened between,.._.But the theft of track, ties Feb. 5 and 28. r ... and equipment means a ccmlderable setback to the LOSS DISCOVERED effort to open the line. It was not UDtll a month lat.er that the losses were u,,,........ COUP DE GRACE -The firing squad commander adminlllers the coup de grace following the public execution of Vietnamese battalion c'bmrnander Lt. Nguyen Van Phuc, at Chi Hoa Prison in Saigon earJy today. The 24-year-old of· ficer was convicted of embezzling more than two million piasters (about $160,-000.) . =~~ec1xrut1:iea~:r~11'~ Embe%%1er Executed Saigon. Some of the railroad ties wtre reportad to have tum· ed up Jn bunkerl .,., med to protect ronrmnent ·I• rtalJations. Some were seen being sold on the blact market in the capitals of the three provinces. He .Smiled Until He Died With such w h o 1 e s a 1 e tosses of railroad material lt was feared that some of the valuable steel rail! and t.lel would fall Into Viet Cong bands. The ties would make -SAIGON (UPI) -Nobody black cassock. He stood tall, that il was Phuc's family Two bags had been opeode cried today when tbe firing shoulders thrown back. like saying goodbye. by the bullets and ~d squad stamped out t.bt.ir a soldier. The crowd was At the atake, Phuc still gushed out. Firemen wash. cigarettes and executed a puabe<i back and they .,,id-stood str•;'""l. He Ubaled ed away the blood. South Vietnam army payroll •-~ clerk who em b e z z 1 e d ed Phuc t.o the pole. smoke and amiled. The Th~ crowd streamed out •Jll0,000. Several civilians threw aquad, their cigarettes in through the gates. Vendors Nguyen Van Pbuc, the Se· their arms around Phuc's the dust, fired. Ph u c with cold drinks and dried Slwwdown Slated Today --. On Civil Rights Measures WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Owil Rlgbta Bill to b a n hoadnl dilcrimination and pmJ.ab the recl.al violence l>r. KarUD Luther Ki.DC Jr. deplored faced I cruclal Jlome test toda1 at almost More Raids Threatened By Israelis TEL A VIV (AP)-Jaraeli military sources threatened Jordan today with more hft,. and-run raids if Arab com· mandos ooatiDue t h e l r sabotage raid.I in Israel and areu the hraelia aeiRd in the 19&7 war. The Israeli army said it exercised tM right of bot pursuit Monday for the first time after troops caugtt a band of Arab commandoes in the Negev Desert and cbued them 20 miles into Jorda.II. Milllai:y tolfteS said it waa likely the ls.raell.a would we the same tactica again if tile OCCMion arose. In Monday's action , belicopten Oew the Israeli troops into Jordan to attack a commando budqmrters. The. Israeli arm.1 A.id. its troops withdrew after in· Dieting a number o f casualties and bk1wing up a house. Jordan claimed that the Israelis attempted an in· vuion witb a r m o r e d vehicles a n d helicopter troops "covered by a thick umbrella of Israeli jet&" but were d>ased back. precisely tbe hour of bis fu· aeral. 'Jbe showdown WU t.o come at a meet.i.D& of the Hot11e R'fleJ Committee. which agrffd March 19 to declde today whether t.o send the Senate·pasaed bill to t h e floor for a yet«·no vote Wedrl~y. Strategists for the bill were confident they had more than enough votes in committee. Once the mea· sure got by 1',les. they felt King's assauinatioa had awung the balance in tbe House in favor of ~ting it unchanged and sending ft on to the W)Ute Rouse. But there were still a number fo potential threats. At the start, the committee planned to bear ftnal witnes· ses before voting, and Rep. Richard Bolling, CO.Mo.), urged IUJ>l*ters t.o arrive promptly at 10:~ a.m. a n d stay In attendance t.o pn· vent any procedural upset. The bill, put together by lhe Senate and passed 71 to 2.0 on March 11, would out· law discrimination ln t h e sale or rental of 80 percent of the country's homes and a~ents by 1'10 .. In an unforeseen mirror· mg of tbe events of the past five ~ tt also would set stiff t 1 penalties for ra- cial violence. either against minol!itiel or by them. In provWons that might have been applied to King's slay· ing, t h e blU would prohibit interference with persons in exercising their rights or en· couraging others to do so. Penalties would range as hlgh as life iJDprisomnent if the Interference resulted in death. To era down on civil disorder. the bill would set penalties of up ta five )'ears in prllon and $10,000 in fines f o r croainC atate lines or uaiDC intentate fa· clllties t.o promote rioting, supplying ..up.-for Ille in riots, or inatrucUae. rioters in the wie of weapou or explosives, or iD&erfereoce with officers or firemen dur· ing civil disorders. Jn addition. t.be bill wouJd establish a att of ri.gbb fol' lndiam in tbe1' Jdealinas with tribal co.ad1I and courts. I Jn nW:bll ib ~on. the rules committee (llCed leV• eral c.bokes. 8"le ~· ca Leader Gerakl R. J'~ (Mich.), beaded a eecmmt of bia party tbat •a-cl tlle committee to m tbe Bowe to send the bill ., a Bome- Senate conferoce commit· tee for modlftcatom. Southerners urged th e committee to mike it liable to amendments pn tbe Ooor (thus necessitafng its re- turn to the Se!tte) and to permit lengthy deblte, or to detour it to otlier com· mittee. It was an um:me1~ feat for the on March 11 weird coillleldl .. the aU'el!O-UIPOa committee to day of King's -orw• Tbf! mana to get it a. Home the last week · March but failed in the • by one vote. ln a final · y, support· el'3 of the bill eel at that time that t.be ay could be fatal by pus · Home ac· lion past A 22, when King bad p to atart his ''Poor le' s Cru- sade" in WaM111Xw111. cond man shot to death in a neck. The crowd murmured slumped. fish had many customers. week in the government's -------------=--------------------------------1------------+---- Last Victim Recovered By Marines QUANTICO, Va. (AP) - The Marine C or p a an- nounced todQ reco+•J of the l•t al tbl ~ of nm. enlisted men dlowned In the Potomac RiTer lalt Karch I aft.er tbe1r tralnbll canoe capsized. A apokeaman aid the body ol Sipalm•n 1.C. Delmar D. ~ 30, tbe cm1J Na"J ma bl tbe canoe, WU found lloDdlJ OD the Maryland lbcn jut aouth of tbe Nani OrdDaDCe station al Indian Head. Frederickson and th • eight Marinet who drowned were s t a tl o n e d at the Marine base here far lpceSa1 training. Hls dulJ station was at Cormado, Calif. Bodies of the MariDe9 were found earUer. Frederickson lJ aarvived by widow. Corinne, and their three cb1Jdren who have moved al.nee the ac- cident from l"aJrlax. Va., to Imperial Beach. Calif. His pereots are Mr. and Mrs. George Frederickson o f Rhinelander. Wis. 2 Families Die in Crash Of Airliner PUERTO MONTI', Chile (UPI) -Ground ptrties removed bodies today from the charred wreckage of a twin-engine Oblleu alrllDer that dived Into. a moun· talnslde Monday with as persons aboard. Police and C'hilun Alr Force officlall al the crub lite in extreme Southern Qille said all 31 pusengers end five crewmea al the Ladeco Alrlinea DC3 weft dead. Tbe Tictlm.s Included two entire fa.m.Wa, alrllne omda1I Wd, A Ladeco 1pokuman said ibere were no foreigners ahaad the plane. wtJcb bad been on a ru,bt from San· u.aio to tbe IOUthem city of c.olbaque. f'arma Jtee Plona, wbo wltMllld .. a-IA. Wd ----llOl!!lll'L...11!!!' ..Mq_aft pllUlf_ed M&r)J atraltbt down into ~mount Em,.-ador GalDlrmo ad burat into tl.llDM. anti-eorruption drive, smiled ~ until be died, tied to a pole in ftclat ol sandbags. The crowd a p p e a r e d JHMed. They num~tM ebout 1,000 mGllJ !~ti} and elYJdreB liDt4 Q ... ~:£j£ .. =-t ~~ ~v.e>i~ ol the momenta of bat· talon Ptmc. ~~= ~ J one aide of tbe pole. t 11 • Vietnamete ~ climbed at.op 1he eoCtll. the betm to ~ ... tzec:uticm. 'lbc 1fW omcer waggled a fl n •~fi_No pbot.ogra permitttd w the final ve mlmltel at tlerk Pbuc'a life. The 1 f I pbotograpbera mUlteref~tbe pole (tU ~~.-, shoved bM which cM • lM . About • ....... before uecutiou ..-.liie-11 ftrin1 aquad menilien aplbled oat. smoking. A man with a .4'- call ber pistol to adm.lnlJter Ule coup de grace. waited. They mc:rrcbed Phuc in, The crowd crushed in around him. He wol'e khaki pants and an open necked shirt and be sinned at the e r o w d. A Taand from the cro.rd placed a lighted cigarette in his mouth. A ioldier tied a blindfold around his head. Pbuc talked to a priest ln U.S. Bomber Raid Denied WASHJNGTON (UPI) - DefeMe Secretary Clark M. Clifford denied Monday a Nor1ll Vletnemeae cbarte that U.S. warplanes bombed far north oi the Umlt placed by ~sldetrt Johnson tn a pea<:e gesture. • '1'be North Vietnameac are ln error." CUUord said alter a four-Oay Pentagon investigation of H a n o i · s charge that U.S. bombers strucl in Lai Oiau Province lo the extreme northwestern con. of NOl'Ul VielDam cm .April 4, u.. rua. da1 of ttie lmlted bombing ball. "'lbere have been no 'United States-attach n«ttt of the IOth pllfallel liDCe tbt Pteddent'a ipeech eJillt days ago," be 'aid. We don't charge for w rds you ca . 't hear~ \ Our produ t is communi- cation -trisp and clear. We don't ant you to pay for anythin less. So if by r bothered by chance you're e poor reception on a I tell the Operator. She' g distance call, et you a good --•f.·--t-connection and see f at you•re not --- charged for words you ouldn't hear. ·We're here help,:;_.. _ The Great Orange Coast's • No. 1 Paperf l Sa Si BJ tlPI I Tbt aiateni depe114 tr Pe: the t 'Vletnl bebly munb For Damet 1Ne to I ol the a.et -th Ume 1*h lt BEAS The Wbe lifted • aame West l names United ford t< under ~aln And Alaei smet C:U' Khiev O'ltl' J Hare Umlla One ~n OWD S1 when G!ap. def-ens Soviet pabUc Olines article publltl newap IGNOJ Simi Clline! larte Amer! beck The peosiv Peekir The! sb to probal anila Lat Secret S. M dam al by u. '320n Two increa names allies . Exp COil, s ... <>' fnm : ananc Cem ovtput datro This a min: I nam ~000 and fl East lfaln. BARD Mea ~Jt more CM Wllhi So'fiet hid mD.JlOI IQflJS01 Reel cllltur' ..tlma t• 1 . .,. Zar' ettim1 mD.lo! ne .. .,.. t: way 0 ~ IS' If JW OI' be te oar IO .,,. fJ1mdl U..t la ate .. H Saigon, - ·Hanoi Similar By PHIL NEWSOM tJPI F.-e.lp News Aulyst The Soviet Uaion'1 in- Wtence tblt It It Hanoi, in· •.ndent of eltbtt Moscow « Petint, that wW decide the time and manner of Vletnem pMCe talks ii pro- blbly more than a Com- munllt 1mote acreeD. For Just u the South Viet· aamese have fOUOd it possi· ble to act against the wishes NEWS ANALYSIS f -.. • ,. • .. .. -t • ,._, ~ •• 1968 OAh..v "'1.0T 7 20,000 Now Avallable 22,000 S et for Riot Duty WASHINGTON (AP) -formed ln anticipation of called into UM a brigade of 1be Aim:y, wblcb has possible need. soldien whoee norm a I thrown nearly 20,000 regular Air Fo ...... '--~....-.. have ....,...... 1 .... -th b t t 1 • ""' w .... I"'" -mission ls to serve as school .. vvr-UNI e a e been posted strategically apin.st riots in U.S. cities, around the c 0 u n tr Y • troops for the trainina of has another 22,000 ready to awaJUog call. new o!flcers at Fort Ben- IO· In , .. ,6 ti ning, Ga. These c o m pr l s e 11 uuo connec 00• 00 Airlpiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiii brigades In varyin& states of Re1erve troop-earner units ale.rt, most prep•ed to have been ce:Ued up or plac-Think ~fer move out on from one-b<lur ed on extended training duty notice. Pentagon sources for the purpose. said. However, the Air Force Some of them a r • said some reserve volun- specially organiud pro-teers have stepped forward I · · b to help out and a total of 96 VISJonal rigades made up Air Reserve Cl 19 and CI24 of engineers, artillerymen transport planes have beer. and otN.r combat aod com-bat-support troops. used In the emergency alrlin of regular troops . T.•ma A...., 1~ Nap But. like infantrymen and Tbe Air Force said il was THINK ~ vw .,. piratroopers, they h a v e Im 'bl t 'd tify ' • ' of the United states, their rece!ved riot c o n t r o I posst e 0 1 en tbe J ~ L ft ~-et ally and supplier, so Using an ornately carved table for a roof, a tired the 25th Infantry Division was using for a command traJ.nlna.. units from which t he C" al'll \AAl\X • -the north from time to soldier getl some sleet> in _a bombed out ~ l>Olt during •weep through Hoc Man in South The aources said still reserve volunteers had .~I ........, ... time defied the wisM8 of __ w_bicb_. __ bia_._u.ni __ ~ __ tbe __ b_it __ Battalion, ___ · ___ ~_~ __ Regimen_;;,· ___ t_._o1 ___ V1 __ Metna_:_m_;._~-·-----------------.----------=more::.:::_:bril~adel==~-~e~be~ln~g~com-The~e.~Arm.y~~a~lre~ad.~y~h~u~~~_,...~~~~-~··~~ both Moscow and Peking. BEASON SAME The reasoos are the same. When the United States lifted South Vietnam to the ume level of Importance as West Berlin, the South Viet- namese concluded t b e Umted States could not af. ford to aba.ndoo them except under drcumstances as to ~almost unimaginable. And when Soviet Premie- Alcei Kotygl.n declared the !met Union would not permit North Vietnam to loee the war, the north ldlieved the we Jeverace onr Moscaw. Hard-lining Pelting I s 1imilarly committed. One example of Hanoi's deterrnination to conduct its own strategy came last fall wben Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, North V 1 e t n a m • s defense minister, refused a Soviet request that be delete pablic acknowledgement o Ol.inese support from an .-ticle he wrote to be pnbllshed in a S o v le t newspaper. IGNORE ADVICE Similarly, Glap ignored Clrlnese advice to abandon IM1e unit action against American forces and to fall beck to guerrilla strategy. The war has been ex- pensive lo both Jv.oscow and Peeking. These figures are eome sb to eight months old but probably are the latest a.allable. Lat August, f o r m e r Secretary of De!ense Robert S. McNamara estimated damage to North Vietnam by U.S. bombing raida at '320 million. Two bad rice h.anerts had I increased the North Viet- namese dependence oa their aDles ror their food sapplies. Exports of such Items u coel, pig Iron, canned goods md other items bed fallen fl'Gm $100 million in 1965 to anand $30 million in 1967. I Cement and electricity output virtua Uy had been I destroyed. This meant that to sustain a minimum diet North Viel- mm depended upon aome 46,000 tons of soviet wheat I and Dour, Chinese rice and I East European beans and grain. I BAllD TO FIND Meat. fish and textiles became harder to find and more expensive. Civilian o f f i c l a 1 s in Wllhl.ngton estimated that ~ aid to North Vietnam bad jumped from mlllloo In 1965 to '720 mDJon In 1967. Bed China, torn by Its own cqltural revolutioa. gne aid Ntlmated at $110 million in 1• up to sm mUUon 11t 1W1. Aid from the East E 1 r o p e a n bloc was elti.uurt.ed at about S85 mDlon in 1967. TIM high COit of war is ob- Mii to everyone. But so an the difficulties in the way of stopping tl . IB'S IE fllflDl Y If ,_ bave new netgbbln or bow of anyone moYfng t. oar area, pleue tell oa ao dsat we may atend 1 frtmdly welcome and help U.. lO become acquablted la Deir "" aurroundln,a. lmflllllo• leldl -== Ylsltir - , Results of the 1968 Mobil Economy RUn-. ~ USAC CERTIFIED RESULTS Mobil Economy Run data approved and certified by the United States Auto Club. CLASS .. A" cws "C" *1111UCI Ml.ES cws "[" COlfTllUED MIS PEI IAllM PB UllM Compact Sixes PO u~ MERCURY MONTEGO ............... .22.88 CHEV. CAPRICE .......................... 17.37 *RAMBLER ROGUE. ....................... 24.09 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE ............ 21.98 PLYMOUTH BAR RACUDA ......... .23.32 CHEVELLE 300 .............................. 19.25 CLASS "F" CORVAIR 500 ................................ 22.85 PLYMOUTH VALIANT .................. 22.71 CLASS "0" Medium-Price Full--Size Eights 11w I PBIAU.M FORD MUSTANG 2 + 2 ................ 22.65 ntermediate·Slze Eights PER ,~~t:?. *BUICK LESABAE 400 .................... 18.49 DODGE DART 170 ........................ 21.92 • DODGE CORONET ..................... 20.57 DODGE POLARA 318 .................... 18.46 fORD FALCON 170 ...................... 21.13 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE ............ 20.42 PONTIACCATALINA. ................... 17.98 MERCURY MONTEGO ................ 19.43 CHRYSLER NEWPORT ................ 17.35 FpRD TORINO GT ........................ 19.07 MERCURY MONTEREY ................ 18.11 BUICKSPECIAL.. .......................... 18.54 OLDS DELTA 88 ............................ 18.32 CLASS "B" Compact Eights m ,~~J: CHEVELLE MALIBU ...................... 17.88 OLDS F-85 ...................................... 17.09 •PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA 31 8 .... 20.01 CHEV. II NOVA. ............................. 19.63 CLASS "G'' PONTIAC TEMPEST .................... 18.89 FORD MUSTANG 2+2 ................ 19.54 PLYMOUTH VALIANT .................. 19.54 JAVELIN ........................................ 18.37 Luxury Ca rs 111US PBUWll *CHRYSLER NEW YORKER. ......... 17.13 OLDS 98 ........................................ 18.70 THUNDERBIRD ............................ 18.57 BUICK ELECTRA 225 .................... 18.53 OLDS TORONADO ...................... 15.99 CLASS ''E" Low·Prlce Full·Size Eights 11111..U CLASS "C" PEA Ulllllt Intermediate-Size Sixes RD ·~H~V. IMPALA SS ........................ 18.82 Pb uu. L MOUTH FURY 111 .................... 18.33 •FORD FAIRLANE ......................... 22..77 FORD CUSTOM ............................ 17.96 CAc11LLAC .................................... 15.46 *Class Winner OVER-ALL AVERAGE: 19.17 miles per gallon, at average speed of 55.03 miles per hour If there's a big difference between our Or putting your foot down hard when figures and the ones your ·car turns '"· you start up again. don't blame the car. Or being a 'jackrabbit' on turnpikes Because good mileage Is mostly a mat-The secret is gradual speed crianging. ter of good drivi.ng. And that's what the So try pacing yourself with the flow of traf- Mobil Economy Run is all about. It proves fie to avoid sudden stops and starts. you can improve your car's performance (This year's drivers in the Mobil Econ- by improving your own. omy Run crossed the country from L.A. We' re assuming your engine is prope11y to Indianapolis. Did they enjoy the scenery? tuned, your tires inflated to the correct They averaaoo <:Ner 54 m.p.h., and to get pressure, and that you're usinll quaHty good mileqe at that speed you have to gasoline and lubricants. ignore the sights and keep your eyes on {You should know that all the gasoline the road.) - in the Moon Economy Run .is-Mobil'•.-No euu11I --- Detergent Gasoline. The same gasoline To help us aet our good results, do we you get when you pull Into a MobU Station.) recru it skilled professionals? Tht trickt Professk>nll lawyers, engineers, execu- Ycxrhave-1ct l1rtve as' If Mry dros> of tives, yes. Aton& vrith studenls-and.houS&-- gas ·is precious. So you can't afford to wives. But no professional drivers. squander it by aunnins the eneine when They don't get any special treatment, you stop for a llQht. like police escorts, along the way. And they have to observe all the local laws and reg. ulations. So they don't have any advanta~ over you . In fact, the United States Auto Club, which acts as Impartial S\Jpervisor of the Run, has eagle eyes when It comes to in· fringements. (From the time they select the cars at random from the showroom floors, until the final results are tabulated, they never let them out of their sight. And in between, they seal every car in 8 key places to pre- vent tamperins.> ,,..~~ It's no good making excuses. You too can do It If you drive carefully. And as any driver in the Run will tell you, economy anctsafety-&n bandJn hand~ So if you don't, It may cost you mort tMn ~' ~ney Mobil. -· .. f - I ' - For the Record Births Marriage Li<-enses MAllCM IS AALES.llODINE, C..rv C .• 13. ol 7217 Horbor lllvd • (a.ta -tnd 00<0111v s, lO. of 111 xi,,,.,.,, L- lluc11 llllOWN·ENFINGER, Oavld I! .. It, of n1 C•m•lll• une. ca.ta Mes4I •NI Martina L., 10. also of Cosle Me>e. IA ILEY·JOHNION. Wllllem A., J2, of 411 Pol....itla, COtON 6-1 fNr aNI EU11befll L., 31, of 411 ltl!evue Lane, II•..,. FLETCHER·HASTIE, Jan C,, 1J, of '" Oarrell $1, aNI lff L , 20. al 114 Cobtlllo St .. llolll al Cosla ~ I ULL·llULL Crtmerr1ad), Cl\arlet R , 31. of lftSA Cl\lrlt Sf , Cosr. "MM •nd c ..... i. M . n. 11.a of Cosio -HILKEIH.DE, Thoma.s Hd U. fll IOU W. llet* llMI, N__. hKll Incl Joan H , 14, of lAI02 San Andr•• Lene, Ml.sslofl V .. lo Marc~ II ESTES.LEVEGNE. Donald E , 10, of 710I 13111 SI , WHtmlMltr ond Ellutt.111 A .. 1r, ol wes1mln11•• PAllSONS.CHll!M, It-rt L , 67, of MOO Whl Ave., Westminster tNI Caltlertne S, Sl. of 14195 5P•l"9d1'4t, WestnllMter ROllERTS.MAllEN, Ron11d E , 2t, of '511 A>Hft AVI , T~. Aril.. INI 1(1,..., J , n. of J010 River Av•, H-lllea<ll MARCH 2t C~SOH-PARKHIL.L, Erk M . 71. of tecll ~~'t~: 20':"~.,..,, .swood St H--1 1 .. c11 W I ltT·CUHijlNGHMI. Franlc C , 7J, of ?711 l"lectfltle Avo., C..ta Mn • -llerll¥• R.. 2', eho ol Cost• ot&.~4.PATTERSON, Dcneld A .. If, of0~11s Allbeme, Hvnllnllloft Bee<~ 11111 1(1/~'"" .L-!.JI· # '111'1 N. •n d ~~cn1 LOffG-""ITH. <l«•ld P., ?2. of ms Per..,..., C•~~lf'd JudY G., 11, ol 0.17 NI c;.r Gr w 11511~es.-11'¥.IN s rernurt;. l-· ,, 2.f, J't;O ulart. Cos • -and U<N A., )I, ~~ i,Olle 111 HAUGWTOH-WOOD -C:-11• Winna. Ill,~ llttti.cn Anni. 20. llolh ot c~.tL'TcK.C'&PEL.AND -T-Lff, ?7. encl SuoMI M.., JO, llolll at Costa M.ltM MC CULlOCH-F'REEL V -HllClll Wll-. tt. Ind ~rci. Lynn, 27. bolh wXh11lmM1rif" -David arec1 .... 49, -S..lldr"I J .. n, JO. bofll of C..la O~UIF-FRO~ -JKlt H, '11 of Ja~lnolon, i . 1nc1 Dolores we. .ofN MCll tRUitN;.?,R"i"ni H -ForreJI L., 43, of ~':'rm~tw -Doris .. '3, of MM<l!M HALL·WEl.LS -Letter L-11, AO, ol Wtstmfntft.r, •NI Frtnca L, .a.l, of HlG'A~~·DENNV -Rober! S .. tt. of Moft~~lo. •NI Carolyn S.... 13. of ll•lboe ltlaNI HEllHOOH·RVAH-Marvlft I .. 4'. and Eien10t G., 4. bo1'1 of Fountalft GJ~t'l~·PETEllS -Yfllllam Sid.,...., ~· :I ~":i.!"'• ~~«JI 11'lryn Lnt,., HARPER-GEtto':t -l ...,_, Joo•""· 10, ol Cosla Mesa. •NI Ml<:holi.. 20. of YllCl lH MINElt·NEllllACIC -AIY• Wwre<>. ,,, of Dowlwv • .,,., lltl1Y June, '1, or South Lawna MW: JI IT~E·OANIEI. -lto'f G-. 541 lel"t a Muriel E., "· o Pf 'rlAlf.f1.'f'tMAM -Per Vklor, 35, Ol"il~ ~Oemente. Ind Jcwce Ctn-,_ JI LHUN Ilea~ •eEO-M'e E~"'415otd, ,,, end ,,,. ty int AO of Olll Me .. ltOW ·HOUh It -•mes ~tvln. n. V! ~ -· aNI LYnd.I Mn, 11ots..0U "~"'iW1. -LY'-• .!...· "· er.if ""'' ltH, n. ""'" or Wn1m t.i. C<r}LINS. II.LIAN -Willllm Alleft, ~: of 17 '~n=.l.r encl Donnt HOl.TllAcbfsl':. w. 111. "· of Hunll~ ).•di. and Cvntllla I , 10. 0S11~f.'0E"&°ll'1te -ow11111 A" 301 ~ ~-~"'• encl NeflC'r C, 11. o l(ylruj~NIGOSHI -1t1ct1ar9o11n. J• ,.,,,..,;I• a~dt and Sharon ., 76. CLARK·llOllNSON -Jemn J L 31, -01110 Anne,_, 23, boll\ \.Olla l ~VI~ I c H. $(Ht!: Ell -Ku:J ~:;,,:,"\e~O. 'trt"9tuN IH<ll, • HU~·MllR IA!IT~ -Wltll.em F , $4, 1 l .. tlCt. .ft 1!!111! of Me:-a FOO twASHBURH -~lf1m It. S.4, of ClllcMo. 111., -M¥'t Loubo. SI. ol ,.,,_ !Ml Mar WMIPLElt·aJORKLUNO--,. 111-°" M ' ,,, ol FullofflM\, n Y •• JS. tu~:'e'l':<~":~ -wi1111m hrtram. )l, o1 Fuller!On, •nd MarilYn halNlll. )t, of Wttfml~1 S t.VILA·llROWH, ThOmh A . JI, of •7•2 1411atle Wev, N__, hKh ond LINll M~ JO, of 11'33 ~111, Norlll Holtvwood CllOW·BRODElllCI(. Warren c. "· ol 111'-A Otlawor•. Hunlln9lon Beocll .,,., Ltsll• D .• 2J, ol 701 E. Av1k>f'\, Sanr1 Ana. MALOONAOO.FIJENTEZ. MIC1111t J., It, of 111311 Cinco d• Ma vo. '°""' .11tn Volley er>d A,,,._1111. It, ol '10 N En9lls/I. Soni• Ana. GOROON·WElll, Jennts D .• ll, ol 70f) M~ Vollrt and ~l.M L. U. of 11.i.s Dunnl"9 Drlvo, llolh of l.19\lf>I lluch ,<\ADISON·PEARSOH, ~Is D • 10. of tit ,_,.., -4nM M , If, ol 174 klfffl, Costa Mna. HILLIAR D-GRAHAM. F'••nlllln E .• lt, II 1ns1 Dono llWI Pannele l • If.. of J:lll MIOle, llolh of Wl!ltml"'I«', '1Nl(EltTOH·SIMPSOH. lllellanl 0 , 11, of lllll L• Pal Ind ltorv L • ••• of 9032 Wo$11i,..,on. l>Olll of WUI• '"lntter. CONL!'l'·HASOfl, JOltn C., )I, of *' Horner, Wtslmlnsl'' and Phvlllo s., •ho ol West,,.lnll•r. 11\llTSCH·SIMOHOS. Curtis M,, U, ol IStlO Pa-. Aw , luslln •NI 'lklorla E.. lO. al -Vie ~ ""'"" llllCJI, CH4 TMAH-GIL!lEllT, 11.n...., C , n. o1 "" W. Pa.-P'i.ot -larbar• M . It, of SIG ~ llofll fl/ Wnl- t1'"'-Stcr lltCHAROSOH-DUGAN, K-111 A , 1•, of net W. Qulnevtt, IC-ICll. W1t111 .• encl ltl-lno l .. 2C. of 16SI• Oell Cini•, 1'-'•lft Valley 111'4A,l EW1$, Fred 4., Jl. of ll111t >Jiii SI , '"-1'1 hldl Mid Dorothy H • JI, also ol N-1 leech. CHAVEZ OEMOHT, Ronald J 71, ol 10 4 MCNetl Wey. llHN Pa,. °"" l I,,.,. D , lt. o1 "1) Go.II. Founloln Vallo ..... TTllASS.NATTltASS. Don C, H. ol 206 >4111 SI , No-I loUh incl Parrlcl• M . n. •l\o ol NeWPOtl lluc.11. ALLEN·PRlllLA, ~ITfllem W , lS, ol II) s. WUIChHter. Senta AN Ind Dl•N L., 1$, ol .07 J11m11ton SI • Co\la Men. FDX·SCHDCl(E, Antllonv W , T.), ol lOS f. Orcll<lrd. S.nl• Morie •nd C«ll Alvl, 20. ol llJ C0tt11, CO>lt Me ... FREEllERG-ICOlT, llerM E , 24, of M7 SMtl,,..r, Cosio Me" ond JNnle C. ,., ol 7•14 $. l(_.rd, W..tttler HUGO<OHltAO, ..... ,,.,,.II G ,., ol .. 1 l'ornlH I. C0ton. O.I ~r - N•n<Y l , ?7, of SJOI Neot..,,., Newpor! lffCll. REVNDLOS.SHAW. P..,I H , J.J of XlO AIYarado, Stoduon. Clllf , w Jo- anne. 20. al a 11 .. con en. Haw-_, !leach. THOMPSOH·CAIN, IC-111 II., 30, of :IG:I E. Adele. Ana.helm •no Ver• 4 .. 2', ol 202U Gorden!•, Hunllnvton lleecll. ~rdl 14 HANSEN·llURKE, Henry D.. '4. of 1376.< LOCUSI SI., Woslmlnllor •nd ICathorlne T • SI. '"° of WUlmln-.sttr. MECHLINE04NDERSDN, Edver I .• IO, of 314 L"r!UPUr, CorGrll def #Mr and Hermine A • 14. of ~ S. S.venth SI, r.,,.. H1u1t. 171d. NICHOLS.VAH TASSEL, Raymond H, It, ol ltlll Clndv Lant, l+unllntlon llNCll encl K•lrlne, 16. aloo of Hun!· ''"'""' lle1t11. WllYH-CHAMPEll, Porll•r R , $$, ol 1'16 Sandah•ocd, (<1111 AWN - Mlldrtd M .. ll, of S77 Irvine A-. .• NtWPOM 8H<ll BAOTEMARKLE·EASTVOLD. Mlcl\ael W • 2l, ol JI I Aleb.lm•• Huntt11111on Reach •nd Troda G.. 24, of 13071 CoJ.t Linda Lane. C..rdln GrOYt. MEREDITH-HUDSON, Mlclletl A .. 11. ol "31 Mullyn, Hunt"'1Jlon leo<fl •nd JCothrvn L,, 17, of lllll JtHer· "'"· Gerdel\ ~OY• CASTILLO-HERNANDEZ. Manwl G., JS, ot '12 Hlnfll SI., Hvnlln•ton llff<ll -ll.,.._rlt G., ti, Of 111'7 Goldf<I We-JI, Hunlltltlon ll•Kll KELL V-MARSHALl, D6n M , ti, of m ovi.. •nd Allee F, 27. of 1m K...-, botll of Cost• Meu ICRAFT·SCHUL Tl. c.,,y G.. n. of 4'1 Plnecresl Drive. L•tvna h eel! ond Gtort1 0 .. 19, of 152U 8rlon- 11ne Drl•/• o.,,. Pollll •• CHRISTENSOH·RICHARDS, N•ll L., 73. of ,,, Walnut SI,, H•woort lleocll ond P1trlcl1 A.. ll, 1110 Of HtwPorl Buell. ~rd!" 14UM·ICLEIN, l awrenct 0, 31, o1 lJI Hotoltat Road and Llnoo c , 31, of JIS Vie Nkt. both ol NtwPOrl leach. WREN·ISNER, llt11wllD , 25, o1 tSO Almer St • Sen Ptdro •nd Slllrtey 1 .. JO. of l74t Lorenzo. Ca.ta Mf! ... 110'1'0.HIATT, Olan W .. X. of 11' Me in St •nd Jorda K .• V , of 11111 Car. manta, llo111 of Hunllll91011 lleaCll ERtCl(SOH·llDMEO, Donald L, 11, .,j IUSI F1nlui1 Lane, Hunll1111lon lle•cll •NI Linda L.. lt, a lso of Hunti11111011 Bu ell. 0 14NDER·FINCHER. sre .... I( 21 "' 1111 llalboe 81\ld,. NnoDOrt" llt~h •nd J111«1 L .. 16, of 1029 V1'4tttel1, CMto Mf!u. PHENO.NDRBEllG. Wiiiard M,. 27, 01 ms E • Ocean """" LOllll 11uc11 •nd Jane A., 23, of 1412 W. Ocean Front. Newt>0<1 eeoc11. Merell ,. HAINS.RIGGS. Gearn M., n. of no Raltl!lft Ave., •nd CYt1lfll1 J 20 ol 2tll T •baoo. botfl of Cos•• ~ .. ' AllllDTT·STANLEY, n..,,0 A 23 of 112S Balboa, Hewoon !load!' Ind E••lvn F., 11. of 110 Fairview Ave "rcadla. ·• lOOAN.()LSEN, Hu9h l , JO. of ltl?I lltd Hiii 4vo., !>ante Ant1, •nd 1119., M • U . al 1ff2 Counlrv Club Drlvt Coste Mew. ' 11c~!lt. Y:~s;..~•rricilide: M•rr•- • Merell 24 !;:TZER·HElSDN -Jolln T lf ol F ~ ......... I nd 0oN JNn'.' It; of 1tu~YA''1-c11ANE _ "*'' Thomu :r.;.r.:' 11v~~ Lynn, 11, bofll 01 Hun'. Mardi 2S G:,E~~~llt..c,, ltoben Charlr: 17, l1 A•n jOl>rio/ • llf>d Carol , u. 11 ~:!:~~YM.:-'7~r~be::: ~" w~~~N,.tCMOHEllT • -Tom, "· of flftOton IJ°::ch I nd W-, If, of Hun· Mardi 27 s1;,i.~R·ASHT~ -Jo1Vlor M.f<lrloll. ,, 1I, ~;119:-"" •nd Judllh Allee: Merell ,. "91"~RTIS -H.-E .. S7, Of Hun-Ffjtf'l~•ch, •ftd lorralno c., "· 01 M~1t1AN4.~TO·WllSOH _ L•wreftct ...A~~1:"<.iof .!.',r1• 4"··~ 1>o<1na ~Ii"'' ON·HA~~f,01, 71 •nd 11~• JM~. "if.' boll! of Hunl(ne1on Div orces OIVOllCU FILID :·'" .... .,...,. ... ,,_ J. '"'"' °::,,..~..,,Im "' Ju""' Morate, ~~ti A. Toney "' G1"! ,,,.,.. Elf•-Howar1'1 VOl9t .., ltl~llard Alien vo181 Ll•I• L. Hew.nan .., l""' Davi~ Ntwmen v Alld• Voll ... Wlli.m Voll Nwe J. Hardln .., Ci.rtft<t H.tnlln Joan II. llttM'I vt Mlel!HI E. a-~~~~~~ .., Cl\arlb Sle1Hr'd v1;:;n11 c. p,k,.._,,.. si--w. ,.~. &a;::;:,::• l'eclcMr-"' 11*'1 LM Fir.: Amos C.MI" yt Alftn lo'f<"e Vlclor EU9-Lo.., vt S."""I IC-al L•ne !'aut ll1vmonc1 Duftca• "' Elalt Dllftc.tfl k'(;':l:..i C G<luldtfl "' !'au.. J llufh M. G1llow1v "' 1(-fh M G1ll11wn E':;~.~· Scartdai. "' Llovd c le~,"[;;. L. P'tlten Y1 lllvrnoncl E W1U.r llobl_, w MYl"lla C. ltOblMOn C0tt Att-v.s l on!ltclo ..._ ltlc"-nl D. L-l vs lartle,.. L-f l~:· AM Loftb vs Arion Roe Loi· P'alrlc11 M. Sur...,, "' Gordon II. S4'tr111 IE~ SdwftUdr "' Cher• G E•-A. Orlow w P'alrldt R Orllw S..... OMtt Wllleol HU• "' ...Wiiia W-Hlle J. C. n.or--"' ci.r. Ellltl ~ IN,...,., P'alCNll ..,. It-Owatrw l'nc:ll4tll Do-L .._ "' E-rd M Howtt I See by Today's Wan t Ads • Want a f?ft Wya.ndoUe! What Ir. II? W.rt. II EATS! • A girt lllq> fer Mlt In l\n excellent tie.ch location. • ' beauttlul. rn10neble Af'Cl:!AN HOUND ..aJP. • 1'oo *eel to drtv .. ~ car aftl'f' )'lliuro aolf pine T Httt'a a roll cut licem- f'Cf for lhftt _. • Wbm! ~ CUI pt Md- boards dlHp • . • mciy modeb. • 4 fAmiUn an 11lllil'lf a MAMMOt1f SAL£ "' ttM!lr houll!hold llmu1. . ~ . . \ ... . ----........ -- ----------~~--·---- ~ new budclinq fashion •.. flower pins, please do pick some! By Albert Weiss. Lily white and fresh as a daisy, these polished enamel flowers are bloomin' out all over. Choose brazen blossoms or petite little posies ... daisies, asters and more. All are chalk white. Pins, earrings, bracelets and daisy ring, from 2.00 to 3.00 fashion jewelry 22 the handbags for spring in sleek, white patent By Theodor. Shiny, sparkling white ... there's a whole collection at May Co. It's the light bright look of spring! Perfect highlight for your springtime fashions. Shown: a. double handle swagger style. Fully lined, with side pocket and zippered compartmehf. See it tn bone, too1 11.00 Others from 11.00 to 13.00 handbags 26 d. ;' pretty-toed patents with chunky heels New spring-white patents, all shimmering with fashion excitement~ Squared away toes go wildly flirty ... with peek~-boo cutouts, saucy bows or criss-cross straps. All resting on JX>pWar chunky heels. At May Co nowt b. MiM America basic pump, also ir. black patenl 12.JJO 012) c. Buakena bow pump, also in black or navy patent. 11.00 (112) a. Lamica latticed sandal. 19.00 (12) e. Town and Country sling 11.00 (12} • boulevard shoes 112, moaerate ahoes 12 1V.C .A. , . . m1y co sod cOiSI pl111, llll bristol st., cosfl ·•es1: 5'6-9321 , 675-3•11 -shop mon41y .,. Slluruy, 10:00 1.111. ~ tJO p.&._,: ' ' '~---~ ...................... ._ ...................... .._ ...... ________ _ • 'I lor :tne l o 'DU Dis '()r: ~a) : F Fe pie 1ur (DO ber Ciel ~ne mo • 'I tin• t: ~o; 'the J>er .. ~1' ' .:c Holland'sZ uyder Zee inally Nearing End IOIT01t'$ MOTi -The Nelllfri.nc11 s allout it.. aln <JI Vennont end Mau· It. eomb!Md, but mu<ft t/A Its Is llelow M• 14tvtl. In an ~ lncrtese Its lend .,.,, IM oowrn- nt h•• been dralnt119 IM .,.. fo<'· ft'ltrlv -.-11 the rtcl1lmed lend to '•""*'· • AMSTERDAM (AP) - fOrmer Zuyder 1.ee ls in )ts final stages. w i t h yeclamationa nearing the .outskirts of Amsterdam and offering the overcrowded ~enter of ~ Netherlanda new soil at • quarter of the • marltet price. ... The first soil is emerging :ln the latest Dutch Zuyder ~ polder-redaimed land 1;:-the 106,()()().&cre southern .fleveland. • Since the dike was closed last OCt.ober, power f u I \>umps have been working onstop to drain the polder half a year's time. After mpletlon in May, planes JVill sow reed seed at a rate .. _, Doctor Bill :-U>st Rises • . The premium for ttie doc· 'lor bill insurance f o r ;medlcare Increases from $3 lo $4 this month, Ralph A. '!>illman, Soc I a 1 Security District Manager reminded ~ange County people to· -day. : Persons 6.S and over who Jlre enrolled for the sup- plementary m e d i c a I in· surance and r e c e t v I n g monthly social • e c u r ity benefit.a will find the checks CieUvered to them .tomorrow &ne dollar Jess than last month's payment, he said. The Government will con· tinue to match the increased premium so the doctor bill insurance will C<>ntinue to be ~worth twice the amount of ~ premium paid by the J>enoo. . .. :New Marine . .:Course Planned of 250 acres per hour, to sti· fie b~g weeds and h'lp in draining the polder. Unlike the four former Zuyder Zee polders reclaim· ed so far, only half of ·jie new polder will be used for farms ol 150 acres. The other half is earmark· ed for housing, industries and recreation, and possibly an airport for supersonic jeta. .. ·~ Tbe area or the polde!' jut. Ung to within some six miles towards Amsterdam i s reserved for housing. The first town, however, will be built across the eastern lakes separating the new polder from the old country. This village will house 5,000 ot 10,IXXI people living in an area where vast woods will be planted. Production costs of the reclaimed soil will be a quarter of the price of buflding site& a r o u n d Holl!Uld's big cities. The new polder also will bring the north of the coon· try nearer to Holland's u r b a n a g g lomeration, ahnost linking the big three cities of Amsterdam; Rot- t«dam and The Hague. The new high road td the north will skirt Lelystad, the Zuyder Zee polders capital under ~truction in the adjacent eastern fleveland. Flevoland, where the first citizens already settled in the first completed houses of the 500 under con· struction. is planned as a ci. ty of 50,IXXI with provisions for a growth t.o double this number. Lelystad W3$ named after the pioneer Cornelis Lely whose statute is a landmark on the 30-kilometer dike wnicb barred the North Sea from Ul4f Marly 900,000-acre Zuyder 1.ee. Before this dike was clos· ed in 1932, the first 0£ the Zuyder Zee polders -the 50,000.acre Wleringermeer -waa reclaimed in 1930. Three more polders, in· cloding eoutllem Flevoland . were reolaimed since tilen and completion of the last ': New col.U'ses In marine polder -Marlenraard -is -technology. tool and die planned for 1980. The five ~eaign, police science, poiders &ggergaU 562,500 e e U<:hnology, air acres, leaving a fret!b water rtation and sports of· reservoir ol 300.IXXI acres. 1k1a g 1'il1 be added to the caned ljeseimeer. Orange Coast College cur· Part of the 150,006-acre ticuJum next fall. Markerwaard weady are The additions recently built. including a stretch .'frere 4J>proved by college · linking the former island of ~strict trustees. Marken to ltte mainland. ONLY 5 DA TS LIFT RllllOS, IOMAllS, COfl11111MEN, c-,,,.., ...,. ~ ......, Mthe tlMn't fwwl ltte ·~"' Cllfflplt•ll-.. hfte .....,. llOCIC wlll W, ,... c..-.... ""' "' ..... e.-.............. ...., _.w ...... Yev'I .._ IT'S TIME To File Your I01ll fllDllA1 MD nan m • ~1 ....... Tu s.M wlttt Owr 2000 OffkM I 1134-C NIWPOIT IOUUYAID (et Newport Md H.,._), c.t• MeM -Nft t AM •f N . IATUUAY ·fU ... AT f • I ....om..,..,.. Tuesda, ~prtl CJ, 1968 D~LY PILOT 9 PoUutl~ Spreadl'!fl · More Waste Than People OUITTING BUSINESS SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A pollution expert calculates that the United states apews wastes acrots the land.scape as if its population were 39 billion. Our nwnberical popula· lion of a trifle over 200 million "is not a measure of our ability to polute the en- viNnment," says Dr. James P. Lodge Jr. of the Natiooal Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colo. He referred to enttneer R. Buckrnmin«er Fuller's con· cept of "energy slaves" available at the lip of a switch, the turn of a starter. or the energy used in mak· Ing things we buy. Fuller estimated t h a t each man, woman and child in the United States bad at his beck and call something like tbe equivalent or 185 human slaves. Lodge says that with the Increase of living standards since Fuller's calculations tbe figure hu increand to about 195 eTiergy &laves per capita. "What Fuller did not point out is that these eoe.rgy slaves have their own waste products. even u w e ourselves d<>." Lodge said at a recent seminar in San Francisco. "The trouble is that they are not like our wastes." he explained. "Many of them are new on tbe fa<!e of the earth : some are acutely polsooous to all life, and very few of them have been around long 909ugb for biological systems to have developed which efficiently remove, ttiem from the en· vironmt ot. "Ar. a result." Lodge said. "in a verv real 5en~e we are not trying to dispose of the wastes of 200 million people, but of 39 billion equivalent people who produce a strange and inhuman k:i-nd ol waste product." Retired? ••• or getting ready? Would you like a check month after month after month in your mail box? Then our Monthly Slcvrity Accountplan js for you. Start by openina a dividend.-mina savings account. The chart 1t the nant shows examples of how the plan works. Customer acceptance of this plan has been most gratifying. (Payments subject to provisions of Sec. 8104 ot ttle Cllifornil Financial Code under which a SIYinp and loan association may not waive its ricftts to requlrt ap to six months noticl of intent to withdraw. [vefJ withdrawal request Ila been met promptly in our 32 JllfS.) Send for 10C1f fne. Mollthly Security Accotlnt "Computer." Safe Deposit Boxes are available in our main office and will be in our new Newport Financial Plaza Off ice -Fall of 1968 Savings Account Loans can be a big dividend saver to you--a way to keep your account intact. You may borrow up to 90% of your savings account and repay over periods rangire up to 36 months at a net cost to you of 2 % . Where can you borrow for less? Reversionary Trusts ••• can provide 1 sublUntlll tu savlnt for you and the entire principal reverts to you at the end of the Trust term. Earnings ire peid to the one you designate; i.e. to a son or • dauatrter in collep , an ex-wife, 1 retired emptoyee, 1 parent. Write or come in and explore this with us. Tax control is an Important part of good money manaaement. • Lodge defioed polluUon u "the u n r a v or ab 1 t ac· cumulation of the metabOUc wastes of our society." Re warned that, witli the population Increasing, the pollution of air, water and soil must be considered together In regard t o neighborhood, community, and global effects. • SELLING OUT COMPLETELY • ALL PRICES SLASHED • SALE NOW IN PROGRESS ''We haven.'t yet come to think of air pollution as an insult to the total en· vironment," Lodge said. "A pall or pollution could well engulf the world. We must consider what we can do lm· mediately. what must become ultimately feasible if we are to survive on earth " Cash • Bank of America • Master Charge • SACRIFICE PRICES MEN'S, WOMEN'S and CHILDREN'S Lodge sugge6'ted as a starter total rethinking of the "sheer pr~s or get· ting people from here to there." BRAT SHOP-PAGEl-MISTER SHOP "When 50 percent or the United States is blacktop· ped. will it really matter where we go?" he asked. 1809 NEWPORT BLVD, COSTA MESA -646-0SOS "'°"thly ~t rS:.!curity ~'"Plea ~ ~N'ir.sr $20,00o: $100 ~ to, Yot1 ,._,,, s1 so ·oo io Years $.,., -.,. ,,,. · 10 Years ~ 17 .350 00 INVES • 9 550. llO(f T $25,00(). I ·00-$] .oo 10 . OO.oo 15 Year$ $25 Years $2 1 60o.oo $15 INVEST $30 6,oso.oo $1 o.oo 10 ·OOo: 50.00 15 Yf!ars $26 0 •AJi Pf1 • Years $23 · 50.oo our cu~lorq "' l'Otlfldtd .200.oo dti/y •n!"t •1t1tu1/ ,,,. ~ solf •nd .,. "--, "' I u Plld q "' .~ ..._en ,.. d Of S.l lt>J Ulrft11y, m,Z"7fl· ~Jou~ Wiry front -70.) TIJt cu ~ /1 I lliie . ......., 'lf•i tirtte to lltrte ll'frrt divfdfnd .,,,..,., the ;:: 1Sf1t1, but Will •nd t1ttttfore lff~ Mft · /lot aubsfllJftiu.. the American Express Travelers Cheques are available from Newport Balboa Savings. The safest way to carry money while traveling. Just one more of our many services for our customers old and new. Tax Deductible retirement plan for self employed and professional people (Keogh Act). Real estate brokers and salesmen, farmers, contractors, doctors, lawyers, business partners all can benefit. Funds set aside each month for retirement earn dividends and save taxes too. let us show you how to build • tax seving estate. Newport Bafboa Savings, unlike a commercial bank, is an excellent and legal depository for Corporate Savincs Accounts. Profit Sharing Funds, Withholdina Tax Funds, Emergency Funds, Reserve Funds, Pension Funds, Funds assigned to State Board of Equalization, funds assigned to Contractor's State License Board. ALL earn healthy quarterly dividends. When our assigned savings accounts are used in lieu of bonds, the eamines on ttllse accounts go to you end you eliminate the bond cost . .,, •lter The Escrow Deparfment at Newport Balboa Savings handles loan, purchase, sale aod exch~nge escrows. We are selected to act for buyers, sellers, borrowers and lenders. We are pioneers In leasehold escrows and financing. For your protection, all employees are covered by bond in excess of $1 million. Safety Assured Corona del Mar Office for your convenience. , Come in and meet our friendly, knowledgeable statt when you're in the neighborhood, NEW! Newport Center Office in the Fall • 1968! In Financial Plaza Irvine Ranch. Streamlined efficiency ..• lovely interior and exterior. Come and see it. ' IlOWPORT BaI.BOa SHJVI DB .......................................... ---.... -....................... F ............... M ... 1936 .......................................... •.".o ... ~o.•." ... •.•.•.o.c•1•.'.'o ... " ....... ~ ---NO A''°INTMINT NIGSSA~Y-------------------------------------..-------------..-----.----\ ; ~ ,.,. .---------~~---._.. -~ -_ ... -------- , n DAIL v PILOT _________ r~-t.--' _•_pr1_1_CJ_. _1_968_ 'Sold lJ• Out' ·av y Buy Town; Citizens Fuming PORT CHICAGO. Cal.ti. n Pl ' -ThP men strung a banner procla1mmi:: t h e dt1 ath nf frPedom aero,~ the town 's main strePt The women harl lire 1n their eye<; and thP children ~ang · · A m e r i c a the Beautiful " The llny town of Port Chicago got ready to take on thP House Armed Services Committee and the U <\. ~avy Monday al a rally in the !'enter of town to protest the ~avy's plan to buv the place Three hundred n( thP town 's 3.000 residents stag· ed the rally and told why they were there LO 'no un· certain terms ''The /House) Arm rd ··. Services Comm1ttre took the "Would vou hke to rephrase that question ! You cowardly way and sold us ju.at asked me which candidate has the best lega • • ·" Histol'ian Ralph Lutz Di<' .. at 81 ST . .\NFORO 1.-\P l -Pror Ralrh H Lull. 81. one or the h1.:'oriral expert<; w h o hPlped Hertx>rt II o o v e r round . the nf')f)\ er rn .. titu llon. died Monday at Palo . .\ltn Cnnvalr!'cl'nt ·Ho<;p1t;il neath resullrc1 rrom boor rMrer ancf cnmplir;illonc; of nl1 C:i!l' Ill' was krnwn tn ''·holar~ ii' nne of thr lr""';nc a 11 t h o r i t I e s on modern Grrrnan history Lutz directed thr I loovrr Institution from 1920 to 1944 anr was dean or the graduate division at Stan· fur<l University fron1 J!lJ.1 to l!H8 He retired 1n 1952 Glen Camp~ll. director ol thr institution. ~aicf that "next In th ,-f n 11 n c1 r r !Hoover ,. Ralph Lutz. wa" Mr H0<1\rr lnc;titut1on." out." said Justice of the ----------------------Peace Otto Lichti. the unin· corporated commuruty's top oHiceholder ·tr 1Chairman1 Mendel Rivers were congressman from this area he would never have aUowed 1l tn happen. C o n g r e s s m a n .Jerome Waldie lacked thP seniority to prevent the purchase," Lich ti said. An elderly man " a ~ rE'fledive. "I've s e e n our sons leave this town to fight four wars overseas t o preserve what we thought we had here in the United States. ~ow they want lo take II away Cro"m us " he said Congress last month ap· propr1ate~ Sl9.8 millio!I to the Navy to buy the town as a safety measure. The town is ·adjacertt to the Concord :'\'aval Weapons D e p o I . where 70 percent or the munitions for Vietnam l( loaded aboard cargo ships. In 1944 an ammunition "',i11p exploded at the dock rrsulling in the deaths of 320 persons. "While wr shudder to think about the amount ol amm·ir.1tion being loaded. we still like it here." said Mn Eunice Van Winkle. a \\'!'low 1n hrr 70's "We havp o u r neighbors and o u r root~ .. S h P 11 r g e ti I h e rlemonstrators to "<;It h~ht and don't move " The N avv has set no rteadline for purchastng all the town property, but of· flc1als are banking on a mass rxodus duriniz thP ,um mer month:; a Ct e r .. chools clo c. 'Free Newton' March .. Halted by Deputies OAKLAND (UPI) -The Peace and Freedom party today was planning new pro· tests ag::inst · · w h i 1 e racism" after deputies turn· ed back its sponsored march al the ste 1s of the Alameda Co unty Courthous<'. Forty-five steel-helmeted c·ourt deputies were Sta· ltoned on the steps of the courthouse Monday when a chanting crowd or 3,500 jiersons com-pleted a seven· mi le march from Berkeley. The crowd. shout i n g "Free Hughey N e w to n Now!" surged toward the courthouse entrances. but were pushed bc:-ck h y deputies wbo formed a wall· like barrier with t h e i r batons. Newton is a Black Pan· ther leader accused or kill· 1ng an Oakland policeman last October. No arrests or injuries were reported at the courthouse. .\fter most of the crowrl d 1 s p e r s e d , some :JOO Donla nville Tria l Reccsf'ed rlemonstrstors began clrcl· ing the outside of the building. Oakland p o l i c e were caUed to clear three streets which were blocked briefly. The march was formed at the University of California campus to e x p r e s s in· d i g n a t i o n over the assassination of M a r t i n Luther King Jr. Al.l.he rall)'.... Mario Savio~ leader of the 1964 free speech movement and now a Peace and Freedom party candidatP for state senate. called for the immediate 11 penditure of $4-0 billion 111 hall ghetto decay. March leooers announced that a car caravan would proceed T h u r s d a y to Vacaville Medical Facility to show support for Eldridge Cleaver, 32. The Black Panther minister of in- formation w.:5 w o u n d e d Saturday night in a gun· battle with police. The caravan will leave Oakland after the funeral of Bohbv llullon. 17. a Black Panther lulled by police 1n thP !it'me hootout. Meanwhile in San f''rM· rm·o Monday, about 300 persons rallied on the step~ nf the Federal buildin~ In protest the !ilayin~ of K1n2. which they blamed o n "whHe racism." ..... . -. -... ~~:~AP~:n::~:?.:U:~~w:~:!:l~~"::~~I ficials at s:antord aod the day mel'Obfn ~ help. r r o m · • d I s advaotai~ University of California in Stanford DOW h8$ some He , a I d enrollment of minority background•" to Berkeley say they w1U work 150 Negroes among its m I n o r i t y 1tudenta has the Berkeley campus. to increase the enrollment 11.400 students. doubled in tfle last two A need also exisLs fot of minority-group students The announcement ca m e years. but still tbe ratio of mtnority faculty members. at those two schools. sevPn hours after BSU Negro studenta remain• on· Heyns said. ' ' M I nor l t y Answerrng a demand by spokesmen presented a 10. ly 2 percent. srudents need mentors witll the Black Students Union, point program for challge in Some 410 students have whom they can immediatel1 Stanford Pre'lident Wallace adlT''" ·ns and eJnploymeol been enrolled as a res\IU of reel se<-ure and models to Sterling and Provo s t practices. a special progra m launched emulate.'' Richard Lyman Issued a Meanwhile. at Berkeley, ~----------------------" joint statement Monda Y Chancellor Roger W Reyns N 0 T I C E night, sayin,i: the university said Monday that progress would. by the 1969-70 scooot has been made in bringing J. FlllPPI WINF"Y STORE year· more minority g r o u p j HAS MOYID •ROM COSTA .,ISA -Try to double the pro-members to the University NOW ONM portion o( minority group of California -but nol o-"',....,.,,.."~en:. M~ ~~~ °""" ,,.._Y employment. , =~eno~u~gh~~· =-----....... ~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~ -ldiliate a pilot program tt11s fall for al least 101 mmority-group students who do not meet nunimal SLan·· ford a c a d e m 1 c re· 1 quirements. -Provide adequate staf· 1 fing and funding w achieve! these objectives. Sterling and Lyman in· vited five representatives of the Black Students Union t.o meet Wlth five faculty and Man Admits Power Cut REDWOOD CITY CAP) - A young man turned himsel! in to authorities Monday. saying he was responsible for knocking down an elec· tric tower with a tracto early last Thursday. San Mateo County Sher· iff's Lt. Nino J . LeSchiavt> said Dale Morrow. 28. who says he 1s from Rifle. Colo .. wa booked on-a-!ehmy charge of interference with electrical transmission lines and will be arraigned Tues- day. LoSch1avo said the in· THE MOST AUTHORITATIVELY STYLED OECISIVRY INDJVIOUAL MOTOR CAR OF THIS GENERATION the MARK III is here ... RESERVE YOURS NOW AT JOHNSON a__tofl ACIOSI FROM THI IAY CLUI toe WIST COAST H IGHWAY NIWPOIT HACH 642-4"1 545-1211 vestiga lion i~~tin~ng. He~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ declined lo co mment on details or to ~ay whether Morrow was involved with anyone else. 'Free Choice' Forces Tra il LOS ANGELES (AP I -A Republican delegation op- posing the fa vorite son can· didacy of Gov. Reagan may not make it w the June 4 primary ballot, the registrar said Monday. "I l really doesn · t look good Cor them," said Ray I. e e . registrar-recorder. after 6.668 names werf' turn· ed 1n on petitions in Los Angeles. 0 y FOR HP also prdt.,ed Lutz Int acqu1c;1t1ons of ,. a I u a h I P historical sou rce material" ·which at the start of World War II "put the institution 211 vrar" ahe;:id of am other \ m e r 1 c a n " c h o\c:rh nr1ti:1m1al1on 1n rccord1nc I h e tumultuou" pol11lc:1l. social and r c o n o m 1 r changes of the 20th cen· tury ·• Monday's rally e n d e d "hen the children sang ··America the Beautiful.., LOS ANGELI::S IAP) - The mu rder trial of Anthonv r>avid Dontanville w l ·., recessed today so jurors could attend a memorial service for Dr. Martin Luther Kin g. i''inal trial arguments b e g i n Wed· nesday. No Close Shave Poll Finds Peare Party Appeals to Teen-agers Hnl.(,YW()()fl I \r1 \ Republican vouth cnmmittl'P pollecl .).llC)(I trrn·i.l(er' at " Hollywood function -ancf R:t 2 percent ~;mt youth favors some par1y other than the GOP. In fact, 54.1 percelll or tbe boys and girls. ranging from 13 to 17, said the party with • the most appeal to youth is a new third party in CaUiorn1a -the Peace and Freedom party Another 20 8 f)<.'rcent ltkrrl the Democrats. 16 II percent favored thr GOP an:l R :t $Upportrd the .\ m r r 1 r a n Independent party or Cnrmrr Alabama Gnv G P o r it t> Wallace. Sen. Robert F Kennedy of New York was rated thP ravorile Democrat of 45.:i r<'ITPnt. follower! bv Srn f·:11grne .1. MrCarthy ·of Min ne ota with 25.2 pcrcPnl anti President Johnson. 15.5 (l('r· cent Richard M. Nixon won 3.'l percent of the vote for Republicans. trailed by 17 percent for New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller and 16.8 percent for Gov. Ronald Reagan On Vietnam. 38.5 percent favored escalction. 47> per· cent wanted withdrawal ancf In 5 percent went .rl""!! "·"· prcsrnt p<1lt.-1 On marijuana. :l6 7 per rrnl •am t 11!' rrslrttlrnn<. ~hould bf' liberalized. 21.1 percent called for abolis h- ment. 32.8 percent wanlccl tou~her laws t<lld 7.4 percent favored no change. Rebuttal testimony in the retrial of the f o r m e r landscape gardener ended Monday. Dontawille. 35. was c o n v I c t e d last November o l murderinl! lecilia Barill, 7, and her s1'1ter Roberta. 6. He was grant<'cf a ne\\ Ina, whrn thP Nlllrl r11lrd hP wa " inarlefluately cfefE'nded. A ir Cylinder Rla!!l Hurts 3 CRESCENTA (AP) -A compressed-air cylinder, ex· plodlng with the force of a hand ~ade. i n j u r e d tllree otuldrefl playing in a back yard. stieriH's officers $aid. Offtt·cr~ said the explosion occurred Monday when the 1·h1l,lrcn stuCCed matches in· tn the cylinder -the typE' used tn fill seltzer bottles The matches ignited, they said, and a pocket of com- pressed alr forced t h e cylinder to explode. G!DP TO Jb"~ ~\ifl\S} dCCOUfJ c Hippie Postman Reinstated SAN FRANCISCO ( UPll -Postman B<>b Barnum returned to his appointed rou nds Monday after his superiors finally concluded that "standaros of nrat- nesi;" arc a little differrnt than they u~rd to be. The bearded and loniz- haired Barnum. a parer! post truck driver. was laid o(( from his job five weeks ago when postal offt c1al5 became "image cooscious" and tried to p e r s u a d e several employes to get trimmed. The refurm movement followed a visit by Assistant U.S. Postmaster ~neraJ Richard Murphy who cla1m- ro to be shocked by lhe "fan tas'ir ~etups" he saw 1n lhe San Prancisco Post or. rice. Barnum remaiMKI tn1r to the hippie fashion. 00-Wevrr. and the post office relented slightly in mid-March. He was put back ro work inside. away from tile public view while official! here and in Washington mulled over his case. Last week his superiors took another dnd morP. carrful look and ''concluded that he meet~ the i;tandardi; for neatness in thi~ da v and age.'' · Back 10 tbe driver's seat. Raroum said. ''I reel hke a real person again. I feel im- pressed !bat I could slaod up for myself and that someone Listened to me with respect." He indicated that San i''ranciscans were ne v e r really bothered by his ap· pearance. Kids and rvt>n business-uitcd types, he sar<I. wavro :it him on his delivery rounds. "The little old lad1e~. the people I wa s supposed to scare, have bffn the besl of all," Barnum said. "They've invited me in ror hot muf. fint." I THRIFT CORNER A little 1hort on money to pay taxu? Visit nurby Southern California Thrift & Lo•r(" todty. Borrow mon•Y • you nffd NOW •nd avoid the penelty of delinquent taxes. R•P'Y In conv•n· lent monthly Instalments. Up ta a months to rep1y. Southern California ~IFT & LOAN PHONE: 646-5045 170 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa ......_e.T 1ReM 6PoW aT. . ,, ANAHEIM SAVINGS ANO LOAN ABBOCIATIGIN I _.._.._........,_ __ . • 'l . .. ' . • ' - .. For The Record Fire Calls HUNTINGTON IEACH q,54 a.m. MC>OOtv, slruclurt lire. 14191 Seber Lan• _ 1'~.1>.m, •. Ira.sh. llr~. ~,r~hu!•I ~I. 111<1 A.S.m• Avt. 2:58 P.m.1 ml!<llcal ekl, Main SI. and O<een •:to p,m., stl'llC1ll"' fir•. 14'41 llound- 11111 Drlw Defettse -ltllllfle A simulated map of Japan's air defense sector is monitored by a Hughes Aircraft engineer as proj-. ected on a tube face of a portion of the New BADGE equipment designed by the company's Fullerton facility. The map is used to show the precise loca- tion of friendly and hostile aircraft. BADGE, which ·has recently been delivered· to Japan, is claialed to be the most advanced electronic air defense system in the world. 5:U p.m .. tr•u fire, 14551 111\ont ----------------------- l ane 10:7• pm,. firt lnvestlvatlon. tlh 11\d 0ce ... WESTMINSTER 11:0ol " m .. ca.. lire, 87'2 l obe A~. 12,55 P.rn , liro lnv.,.uoatlon, 10512 Bois• Avt. 7 .37 1>.m.. rescue. 1111 ~••I""'• Av•. SUL HACH 10• 28 P.m. Monday, slrucrure lire. 100 sea •r•n Yne ·COSTA MESA t :tr 1.m. ~v. KCl~nltl 1l1rm. 1'101 N.-1 lllv<I, f:33 e.rn .. fir• lnvesttoetlan. 62' $M~ lmar Budget, Medical Center Expansion Before Board supervisors a fireworlis-f1ll· Tutsd.ly, APf'll 9, 1968 DAILY PILOT JJ ~9th Birthday Not Celebrated Four Prisoners Still Musing After Fleeing County Jail By THOM BARLEY Of""~,..., ... "Sometimes,'' Broadbelt Mesa ; Case, 19, of 18371 freedom. Five more •ere recap• SANTA ANA -Orange Coast residents Paul Diaz. Wllllam WlOOord, Thomas Case and Rayrnood . Brown s.re 49 today. grinned, "it's a question of a Fourtti St., Costa Mesa and One man broke an ankle tured ln the next 12 days. guy stopping In o n e place Brown. 31 , of 311 Yorktown at the toot of a drainpipe But Case , Williford, Brown just long enough for you to Ave .. Huntington Beach. and was back in the jail for and Diaz are stUl at large. get the culls on him." WiUUord faces wssession break.fast. A second made it "We'll get them," predicts Sheriff's otficers believe of drugs charges:' Case is as far as his girl friend's the calm, u n r u ff I e d they Wert pretty near to accused of r u r n i s h i n g home but was back In his Broadbelt. "You kn n w , But there'll be no candles aod cake for them In the Sheriff's Office here where that figure Is prominently posted. For the f~r men are being sought on this. their 49th day of liberty. in 50 states. dangerous drugs and parole cell next d.ay. these things take lime." recapturing Paul Dlat, 24, violation a n d Brown was -=====================~ The seven men who joined them in a mass escape trom Orange County Jail ~ast Feb. 20 are atl. back behind bars. But anxious sheriff's officers doo't need remin- ding that the last recapture was on March 3 -36 days ago. . "We're still pressing .>ur search," Capt. J a m· e s Broadbelt comme nted Mon· day. "We have, of course . got several leads and ideas that I can't ~U you about at this stage. of 1834 Woodland Rooo. .r Laguna Beach last Feb. 'l1 facing trial on an armed robbery count. in Flagstaff, Ariz. But the They and their seven c.-om· man believed to be Diar: panions made a spectacular broke away from Arizona escape 49 days ago !tom an Highway patrolmen as he Orange County Jail tank. was being taken to jail with The 11 mPn stripped , Thomas Lee Webb of Stan-pla&tered themselves with ton. another member of the soap and slithered their way "great escape" party. along a ventilator shaft to Webb, back ill jail, won't the roof or the jail and say who it was that galloped .::::========= away from the Arizona of· ficers still w e s r i n g handcuffs. But descriptions seem to fit the Laguna Beach man who w a s awaiting trial on charges of furnishing marijuana. As one she.riff's ofClcer put it, "we've seen neithel' hide nor hair" of Williford, 24, or 286 Victoria St., C o s t a BOAT BUFFS Almon lock•boy is tho only full ·ti mo bD1tio9 oditor workin9 on •ny nowsp•ptr lft Or•n9• Cou•ly. His u- clusin covt,.9• of boat. in9 end y1chtin9 newt it • d•ily fu ture of tho DAil Y '1LOT. e INSURANCE TO $1S,OOO e FEDERALLY CHARTERED ANO SUPERVISED e WE PAY EARNINGS ON YOUR FUNDS FROM DAT E RECEIVED TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL e FUNDS RECEIVED ON OR BEFORE THE IOTH OF ANY MONTH EARN FROM THE tST e SAVE.BY.MAIL, WE PAY POSTAGE BOTH WAYS, A CONVENIENT WAY TO SAVE. l',41( C:•ttl"1C:ATH IHUIO IN MULTll"LU OP' 11_ l"O .. I YUlt TllllM COHTi.ACT SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS . . HE.AO OFFICE: 3933 WllsMr• llOIJ-re. LOI"'**'· OU a.12'~ TARU.ICA lllAHCH: ll!SI Venturo -· wrd, JC!l-*14 HUNTINGTON 8£.ACH 8RANCH• 'I Hunllncton Centtt, 997-ta.1 J11111pina Jack Pre School Louted on ith• S.ck Bay OverlQOlcing N•wport • Costa Meu Children Daily 7;30-5:30 Under New Management MRS. PACETTI, Director 2549 Tustin Ave. Costa Mesa 646-0677 Enroll Now ~DAVIS -BROWN Even this lowest priCed FRIGIDAIRE GAS DRYER .,.,. A has Durable Press Control 10:21 •• ,,, .. ••IH t ltrm. FalN lew and .. ker · I 1t P.m .. false ti.rm, 161h tr>d NtW· SANTA ANA -Orange County'!i 1968·69 budget and the proposed expansion of the county's. M edic a I Center: either topic wuuld guarantee co unty ed morning. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij But Thursday they get both in what is certain to be a r ugged agenda . e>«t llvo. l :Q2 p,m,. lalse ,,.,..,, Hlh and lrvl..- 6:IO p.m .. traah llrt, 1100 blod< ol Hemlll.,., ''" P.m .. tint lnve.ti9allon, '" Ha,.. over Drive ------------ 2:G3 1.m. Tllftd1v. Publlc u1lsle11c.., ~ PtPller1fff LI,,. DEATH NOTICES MENDOZA Carlos ~. 110 N, 1tat11, Sonia A"4. Po.-IWl'f APrll I. S<IN1Yed •• w II~. E s1t>e r C, ~....SOU; !WO lOllS. Edmond 1ric1 Ai-so: 1wo uuoh~n. HOH MarllAU and M.trv Ellen IC•Uf· """· Lvlns 1,, ••a~ ., PO'!!< FamllY C"-1 Thuncl•Y at)cl Frldo. Setvku. S..hlrday, 10:30 A,N., Pffl< Famll't Colonlel Fllfteral H-. BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR 3-HSO Costa Mesa Ml &-24!4 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Br~dway, Cotta Men LI g...3433 PACIFIC VIEW ~MORIAL PARK Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel 3SGO Pacific View Drlvt Newport Beach, California 144-%'719 PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL ruNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Weatmlnster 893-3525 SMITH'S MORTUARY S%'7 Main St. Huntington Beach LE U539 WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. mil st .. Com Mesa '4M8&8 WESTMINSTER MEMORIAL PARK Mortuary & Cemetery Chapell •. 14801 Beach.. Westminster ·• -53J.17%5 e S93·U%1 DEATH NOTICES THORPE C-'• c Thorpe. nn 2111 s1 .• w .. tmln"er. Pas~ IWIV April 1, S<wvlved by Pftr...,h. fM. and ,..,,, Cllarlu l , Tnorpt; P I I t r r • I vr-arem" Mr. L-rtft(f Tt>Orpe •ncl Mr1. 8"1rice Jollnson; mtternel •randrno111tr. Mrs. oorolfly 81e11ot1. Gr1wsldt senrltts. Wednescley. j PM. Wtslmlnst~ M•rnorlal P1rk. Olrecltd bV Pet~ Family Colonial FUMrAI Homt. BERMAN ODrolhy Btrman. 16'.01 Laneau Drive. Hullll1101an 8 e .. c ~. S<lrvlvtd by oeuvMer, Mr$. II-Davis; gr•ndson. Robert Don Davis; 11unddau9f\ltr. Oeoora Ann Davis. ~i<;n, Thur!dn, 10:30 AM. Peel< Fam11V CD1onl1l F1111tr1I Hom•. FOOTE Edith Mole F oott. AP• 7~. Of u 1 "' Ctnter SI .. Co•I• Moe. PISS<!'d •w•v Apr11 I Survlved by -· G-W. Htlln, NewJ)Dr1 Btach. arid grand· daUVhtfr, Jf:.tr\ Walsh, FrH'l'nonl, C•ntorni1 Sttvlct! orfv•tt, Olrt"ct"'1 by 8._..lft Morruarv. PAl ~~dor, C,.,\td Mt>so. OWE N Nola Mar;• Owen. .A~ lJ, ot '45 PMllArlno Road. Cost.. W t.a PcHM~d •'*4Y .April 8. SHvlcts !'<'ndlM 8•11 llroedWov MO<'luarv. 110 Broam.,.v. Casi• MtW. KLEIN DAILY County Administrative or. ficer Robert E. Thomas isl the key man in both situa-1 ti<>ns. At 9:45 a.m. he lakes , the podium to give the board their first preview of the 1968-69 budget. S h o r t I y thereafter he is scheduled to report on the proposed remodeling of the Medical Center. The budget preview will foreshadow an upcoming battle over salaries of coun· ty employes. The 6,000 member employes associa· lion has served notice that they llhink a 9 to 10 percent pay hike across ttle board is due them . Cout11y Personnel Officer William C. Hart's figures, based on comparisons wi>tn jobs simHar to those held by county employes in private industry. point to a 51h per· cent pay raise as sufficient. The Med.kal Center con· troversy centers oo the ris· ing cost estimates f o r r e m o d e 1 I n g s e verat buildi/l·gs at the facility to accommodate the n e w llrriversity o f CalifOrnia College of Medicine. First cost guess several weeks a~o wa!i "about $200.1¥Xl." Latest two weeks ago was s.361,000. Money-cons c ious supervi!iOr~ have suggested that the university pay a substantial share of the remodeling but UC officials say legally they calUl()t spend money on buildings not owned by lf1e university. NIGHT •nd DAY · SERVICE 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATUltDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 PM. • • WITH THIS AD ONLY! • GRAND OPENING SPECIAL MONDAY THRU THURSDAY ONLY! CAR WASH WITH FILL UP STANDARD GASOLINE PRODUCTS ALSO GET A FREE CRICKEN $100,000. WORTH OF THE LA TEST IN CAR WASHING EFFICIENCY. COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC. OUR CAR WASHING EQUIPMENT MAKES OLDER · CARS LOOK NEWER- AND NIWER CARS LOOK BETTER! COSTA MISA CAR WASH 2059 HARBOR BLVD. AT BAY. ST . lACltOSS .. OM THIODOal ltOllNS FOID> • ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTID • .... r lbdl l • Durable Press Care. Proper temper1ture pfl/S end·of· cycle cool·down brings Durible Press items out of the dryer ready to wear without lronin&. • Gentle Flowing Heat. Pampers fahfics, dries them fresh and soft. • No-stoop, Fine Mesh Dacron lint Screen on the door. L •131J ---l·. --·'GAS DRYERS 1 , cost \ less to : install ~_,~~~ low~t Priced FRIGIDAIRE Jet Action WASHER with OPC for no·iron fabrics S168 • Durable Press Care. S•ves,you ironing! Gentle wuh-' Ing 1ct10" p\u$ 1 cold water cool·down hip Durable f'ms f1b11rs ktep their no-iron promise. • Oetp Action Aailator. Crtatu currents th•t pfunae tlothu dup inlo sudsy waler for tflof'l)ugll washlnr. • 2 Jet·Aw1y Rinses. Ctt rid of lint ind S(Ull1 so thor• outtilY there's no nted for a lint tup. • Cold Wattr Wash Settinr: Saves hot water. Srv• clolllu from shrinkin1 end fadlni. ----DEPEND ON1---- TELEVISION •Al9~LIANC•• 411 East 17th Street COSTA MESA DAILY f ·t-SA TUIDAY t-J -ln••trity an4 11..r..bility sioc• 1941 - , DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Hanoi Moves tO Talk Hanoi's official announcement that it 1s "1lhn~ to work out a ttme and place to begin talks offers at least a little ray of brightness these unhappy days. This would be cause for greater rejoicing tf the ad- H rsary were a non-Communist nation and therefore one more likely to negotiate t as Western nati ons under- stand the terml in good faith. and with rull 1n1ent to honor its words. Since this is not the case. a peace-seeking L'natcd Stales can only proceed watt} caution wlule hopin{: ror the best. Washington 1s not fl yi ng blind. At th~ h1ghe~l lc~els 1t is recognized that a Communist scenario as unfolding. Students of the war with access to classified informati on have been expec ting since last October that bv thts time the Communists might be claiming "victory" ~nd mov- ing toward seeking a coa~ition go~~mment an South Vietnam, having been denied a mthlary take-over. Great numbers o{ captured documents and other intelligence information have enabled them to predict accurately the ge.neral form and content ?f the ~anoi moves now bejllg made. And one conclusion believed reasonable is that President Johnson would have timed his limited.bombing suspension lo coincide with the time when the Reds thought their winter-spring offensive would come to an end. The President's move would give added cause for a move toward negotiations. As predicted by these Washington insiders. Hanoi is now propagandizing to the rest of the world what it has been poundin! into its political and military cadres for six months: 'The U.S. has lost the war. rt is rent by political division and is in financial trouble. The great offensives of the people's armies have been suc- cessful. So now we wiJJ begin to talk to the humiliated U.S. government." up their own aggressive capability. The Johnson Administration bu given no indica- tion that the U.S. is ready to talk about a coalition gov- ernment on Hanoi's lerttls -which could only mean a Communist take-over of South Vietnam. The Hanoi propaganda is correct in one re- spect. The U.S. is increasingly revolted by the continu- ing casualties in a far-away war. We would much pre- fer to use our manpower and our money for construct- ive programs in Vietnam and in the rest of Southeast Asia -and more Importantly, for our own needs and programs here at home. So much public attention was drawn to the Pr.esi- dcnt's decision not to run again that most persons fatted to hear or read this part of the same speech: ''But let men everywhere know that a strong and a confident and a vigilant America stands ready to seek an honor- able peace and stands ready tonight to defend an hon- ored cause. whatever the price, whatever the burden, whatever the sacrifice that duty may require.·· Standing by this resolve and refusing to hand the victory to the Communists at the conference table could mean. remembering Panmunjom. an agony of confron- tation extending far into the future. But. hopefully. a confrontation less costly in human life. Le,ss Bounce to the Ounce Easler Week opened along the Orange Coast last weekend with smaller crowds of vacationing young- sters and fewer police problems than in some other years. More high school students and fewer college stu- 11ents Wt!re expected because of vacation scheduling in Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. But confirmation that it is a younger crowd cal™? in unusual terms from veteran girl watchers. This is, of course. Asian face-saving. The U.S .. Car from having lost the war, is on the offensive on every front. The nation is not in that serious a financial diffi- culty. And the U.S. is still not agreeing to s uspension of all bombing without assurances, or at least evidence. that the Communists will not use the cessation to step "Bikini wearers." they reported, "seem to pack just a little less bounce to the o u n c e than in other years." This is undoubtedly a better way to measure a conclusion than through cold statistics. SA\.VA6E OPERATloN 'Schmitz ls The One in Wrong Part y' Ldtns from readers art weLcOtM. Normally tD1iters should conve11 thti' messagei in 300 t001'dl or less. Th• rtght io condense letter; to fit spac• or eliminate libel ii ruerved. All let- reri mu.rt inclU<U fignature and ma11- fny addreu, but nanu1 will be with- held on reqiu1t. To the Edi tor : l am iar from beiLg an admirer of Gov. Ronald Reagan. However, I now feel there Is some bope for the man because of his latest stand against repeal of the Rumfcrd Act without anything to replace IL I would a1JO like to comment upon the illustriOU! state Sen. John G. Scbrnltz's resentment of Governor Reagan's announcement. The good aenator 5lated that Reag111 "ls in the wrong party." Perbape, perhaps not. It ts more plaUlible to assume that Sehmlb is in the wrong party, or possibly In ttie wroog country. REGARDING THE party. wouldn 't ht be more comfortable in either the American Independent Party or the now defunct (officially) Dixiecrats? And if it is this country that he finds unsuitable, may I suggest that Bircher Schmitz might be more at home in Franco's Spain. or under Ule present :-egime in Greece Cwbere the "obscene" plays of Aristophanes are ba.Med), or the Republie of South Africa. This last nation mentioned seems to be the best be\ for the senator. for at appears that South Africa's policy of apartheid is the model he would like our country to follow. BOB HOGLIND Dear Gloomy Gus: In reply to N.R.C. (Gus , April 4). maiming can occur without a bomb being dropped. His think- ing is a shining example of this. -K. P. K. "'" , .. ,_ reti.c:tt ......... ..leWI. • .. , fteCHMrlly tlleM tf IM Nwtit•.,.r. S•"' yeur "' ....... te OIMmy Gw, 01My P'lllf. LB'-Bumanltaria11 To the Editor: I invQ my fellow Americans to read Dwigbt Eisenhower's article in the April issue of Reader'~ Digest. page 49. I invite in particular all those who are against the presenL war in Viet- nam. It seems to me that in the new generation 80 percent of the population may have the brains of children under 10. What has the bumanitariaft ad- ministration done for the people? I beg you all to verify what President Johnson has done and continues to do for humanity. I HA VE BEEN an e n r o 11 e d Republican throughout my residence in America, but it matters not whether one is Republican or Democrat. What is necessary is lo nominate the humanitarian P r e s l d e n t . The American people voted and will vote again for Johnson because they a.re mindful of the past I hope it will be the honor of America to have victory under President Johnson. I have seen both Democratic and Republican administrations at work since l!Q; but I have never before seen the political discord an<! rivalry now existing between the two major parties - a disgrace. indeed . that ts prolonging the war. JAMES ARGENTO Slaves to Time , Money fhoaghb A& Large: The ill-paid subordin&te in a pinched economy ls such a slave to money tbat he can't properly enjoy his time: the well-paid executive in an affluent economy is such a slave to time that he can't properly enjoy his money • • • The hardneu in UM: saying "the truth shall make ye free" as that we ~ady have to be substantially free ln order to want to reach out for the truth. • • • Some people C'llnnot gave up an old enemy until they have found a new one: in this respect. enmity 11 much like love. There I• 11 much. If not more. heal· lr.a power ln a Mozart quartet as In a box al uptrlna -but people find It eultr 1o twallow than to Ulten. • • • It la a crude over-slmplificatlon to AJ than an lna&11e person is one who baa Jolt hi.I ~uon~ Cbm.e:rtolt pull1141 mittlf much more KCUr1tel7 when i..obllrffd that ''1be madman Is the met wl'lo bu lost everythln' except !IJa rtatoa." ( l.AJMtla are ftoCDrlously _IDQdl mare tostnt ttrn normal peo- pJe, tlQ 700 accept their major ,.......,. • • • _, . .,.,..,. 11ense of superiority. so. 1n tha t im- portant way. which one 1s more in· telllgent? • • Il is only natural for a loser to t'>.· piain why he lost: but for a victor to explain why he won i:. an oblique con- fess.ion that he doesn't feel he quite deserved to. • When we speak of a man's ·vll'tue." in the old·fasluoned st>nse. we mean his personal honor : when we 5peak o( a woman's ''virtue." m the almost lo!lt sense. we mean ht>T sexual integrity - an<'ther demonstration of language as male chauvinism. in that we Imagine the most important J>dr~ of woman is that which she gives to. or withholds from. the man. • • What the attackers of ptck'ett an too d!me unmdtnW!d wa~ waeIY expressed by Pau] Valery, when be said : "To hit someone muns to adopt his point o( view .. • • A ~re n llml>IY someone who ls suprtmety unaware of the 1tupendou1 aap between his image of 1Um11el/ and othtr people's Image of him : the eutn~ of the bore is that ht ls. ln· trinsicaUy. a strao1er to his on pe:r scnaJ.it)'. ' In il&e Wake qf Dr. King's M11rder ________ ..J_~_ ,.. ---------~ ·~-- ~ American Whites Must Now Answer White slaves killed Dr. Martin Luther King in Memphis. At the moment the trigger man fired. Martin Luther King was the free man. The white killer (or killers) was a slave to fear. a slav1! to his own sense of inferiority, slave to hatred, a slave to all the bloody in- stincts that surge in a brain when a human being decides to become a beast. In the wake of th.ls disasler in Mem- phis. a great many such slaves must consicl1!r if they wish to continue serving their masters of fear, hate. inferiority, and beastliness. It is some- thing of an irony that Dr. King was free a!Ml was hated by so many slaves. It is perhaps too much to hope, but moch of the violent re.action to this bloody murder could be bhm*f if in every .city and town there would now be a resolve to remove what remains of injustice and raclal prejdicea from schools, from trainine and job oppor- tunHies. from housing and community life in general. DR. KING'S VOICE was the last one arguing for non.violence. The ·~:: .. ·.). t I t I --·~· --!t - A PRIL.. 1968 I l. 3 young militants respected hjm enough to pledge him they would accept his leadership in the summer ahead. And oow 7 The old ghost of John Brown wh is- pers out of the by-gone years. He was a white man and a violent one. He was hanged after his foolish foray at Harper's Ferry, Virginia, in the au- tumn of 1859. Brown was the martyr. His death was a catalyst. His soul became a cut- ting edge that broke hearts and wall.s a5 the great war came on with a ru~b. One frets with that memory. THERE ARE OTHER effects of martyrdom. Dr. King would not want his death to be an emotion that brought on what he had all his life opposed-violence and death. Atlanta's Mayor Ivan Allen. who drove his car through a rain-i;wept city to the home of Dr. King and took the stunned wile to the airport. where she learned that death bad come in Memphis, was an- other symbol of the South. He. too. was a free man. He was not a slave to bate and fear. His city is not a slave city bound by such terrible chains as held the killers in Memphis. That city. which allowed a strike of Negro garbage workers lo grow into a protest against all the many remain· mg forms of raci11t prejudice. did not meet a necessary test. And so Mero- phis became the site of a slave upris- inl! where death and bate opposed freedom. THE ~tEMPIDS KILLER and his associates, il any, have dooe their own race a grave an<! hideous inj~tice. They have made it possible for blind violence to be loosed. They have ele- vated the beast in man. They may have imperiled the nego- tiations Lhat, hopefully, may be arranged to end Lhe war in Vietnam. The slave beast does not reason. The beast, unless chained. is only a beast. The white South-the white popula- tion of all the country-must now give answer. From injustice and Inequity. if racist prejudices and discriminations now become the targets oC all decent men and women. Dr. King's death may bring about what he sought for him· self, his people and country. (f this does happen. then the slaves who serve masters of hatred, fear. and evil. will have to be put down mer· cilessly and immediately. Out of martydom must come the right anawer. Alarm Over Kennedy Is Not Minor WASHINGTON -Vice President Humphrey's opportunity is to unify the DerrocraUc party. His support Lies among those who are alarmed bv Robert F. Kennedy. · As a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination Humphrey wiU Inherit a large pert of President .Johnson'a support. and in my opinion. President Johnson's aupport also. The alarm over Kennedy is not a minor matter. H.is toy ing with the truth. his ruthless att•ck on Johnson have done nothing to dispel a sense ol uneasmess about the senator from New York. lr any situation where l h e Democratic leadership, divided as it 1s. believes that it can bold the presidency without Kennedy he wl.]l become more vulnerable. time the convention meets that it will be an asset for H u m p h r e y . Measurable progress toward peace would create a far more favorable at- mosphere for Humphrey. All t:tas bas been weighed by the Vice President. He has amplt offers of financial support. He does not yet have a {inished organiz:-tion but he is ready to run with what he has. and there is no need to hurry in an· nouncing his candidacy 111E NATURE OF HIS support Is not inconsiderable. It includes not only a large part of organized labor but im- portant element. in the national bu&i.ness community wltlch has lost its dist:ru!t of Humphrey as its distrust of Kennedy has grown. The problem. ot course. is that Humphrey. for all his energy, zeal and articulateness lacks the personal magnetism of Kennedy. But on the other hand Kennedy 's magnetism h.a! for many an ominous quality reflected in the crowd hysteria he arouses. Kennedy's nomination could con- front the Democratic party with a serious split involving not merely those few Southern states which have voted Republican or for a third party in recent rresidential elections. The defection could spread to other Southern states which are vital to a Democratic victory and where voters will have the alternative of a Republican candidate or George C. Wallace. McCARTHY YET JHOWS litUe pro- mise of providing tbe amalgam to hold together the divisive elements of the Democratic party. Although he has made an amazing showing in primary ALSO. IN THE END. the two Min- nesotans. Humphrey and Sen. Eugene McCarthy. might between them he able to gather the support that will deny the nomination to Kennedy on the first bnllot. One of the Mlnnesc-tans i5 quilt' likely to support the other iI that means winning the nomination for nnt> of them and defeating Kennedy. Q.uotes in the News The war tuu divided Humphrey rrom Kennedy and M c C a r t h ) Ro:r E. Vogel. SH Dteco -"I Humphrey share~ the Johnson sen~" am tired of paying taxes for :he of mlsslon i11 Asia. 'This issue. President's m.nk run to Texas. A man however. may be so altered by th!'! ... may love ltls ho~town. but hil duty is to the United States, and ror fou: yean bis home ls lbe White House." Dear George · How do you speak ~ n authoritatively on so many m<.t- ters when you give all tho~r solutions to facing up to lif11·, problem&? CURIOLS Dear Curtous: Well. l have found that a lot of researcb I! a great belp so, as J go through Uie. 1 m a.ke OM mistake tit~ (Send your problems to George and watch the mfracle of Sidewaya Thlnldngl 'Y o ur problem will be thoroughly coo- IUMCl btfore your very f'Y~ }- ( Gi!orge will 101ve your pro- bltma tn ltss timt thin it takes you lo HJ EW>iJl Shrdlu backwards l Mn. A. W. Moatn1e. lmpmal 8e9(h -•·u Senator Wayne Morse really believes the 'poor lit~ Com- mJes' are being mistreated by o~. maybe he ahould go live wlUI tbtm awhile.·· S&ate Seaator Uuill M. BIU"a1, Fraao -"W• were told last yeal' tbe Income tu was going up 70 per-eat or ev~ lOO percent: but havlnl-~ .hard Um& fiDd1Ag .tbe '")' 1fbo 11 golng up only 100 per~'ftt." Alltloc•, m., Neww: ··u you're one Of tbote ~ longs for thOM early w• When life was 'S'lmp&t', better .. aaother klok. The pal'f Of lboM MTIJ papen Me dotted wltb atoritt ol the u:ntbne\y deaths of cblldren ad adults from dipb1hcria, anall· pox .. scarlet fever. hydrophobia aDd ..,.~. Dlpblbuit, ln ,..._.,, wtped oot wbol• famillu. AJltd tbt stories of one family losing two or more children to any one of t b e dread d.iseues thlit are now wiped out by inoculation were numerous. Llfe couldn't have been too simple when people were helpless before the threat of almost evcy dlaeue and ailment that human flesh Is heir to " M•'J•mery, W. Va .. Herald: "Pub. be opinion la vital In a government of the people, like the United Stattl, and it Is important ror voten to IWdy public: tssuea and make up tbetr mlnck aboUt DOlidff for lbeir country. When JJi• &:iUUW ~'T° effed what the e approadl to tolve-M 1ii1ii-; 8.V for" c:rtdct to stand OD tilt aktelinet and bO'llJI. TM tttt, bo"''e'" lt not U.. •olurot ot cawallt. but whether the c:ritlCI oUv an lltenatlve that Metnl to poaeu • bttw dlDce ol auccal ••• Nloety percent GI the IG'dce 1ta- Uou In a.. u. s. ... oned or~ td by llldepeldmt )Deal bullwlmatl. -"'*11 Petrolaum TodaJ, pabMlbecl .,, tbt Amaicm Petrolwm lmtinitl. -------.-._...__ ___ -- elections his weakness bas also been exposed. This weakness lies in the working classes and among Negroes, both of wbom are essential to Democratic victoqr, and there is little indication of Southern sapport for McCarthy. If there is to be unity in the Democratic p a r t y Vice-President Humphrey sbowa the greatest promise ol providing it. altboug1~ it cannot be certain that be can do so as far as the South is concerned. The Humphrey candidacy, therefore, must be taken seriously. It cannot be assumed out of hand that because Kennedy bas grt:ater glamour he will easily overwhelm Humphrey, particularly if John~n has wrought the miracle of peace in Vietnam. Btrr EVEN IF JOHNSON bas not dooe so there still may be room for Humphrey as a um.tying force. We can be fairly certain that even if Johnson's present peace effort fails it will not be hJs last. If all efforts fail Johnson may have demonatrated that peace is not to be had on an bonorable basis. or even on a basis that McCarthy and Kennedy would aC(:ept. That realization. too, would W>d to diminiab the war issue. Humphrey's c an d i d a c y has plaoalbwty ftom 1n*l1 &ft&}et not lbe Jee.t of whlcll. sure.ly from, President Jobn.aon'a poblt of view, would be in preveotlog the nominltloa of Ken.oedy • H.tjiijij!Ni Tuelda.>\ A-pril 9, 1961 .,,_. ~ pooe ., °" o.av Hoc ..... ro fftJOf"lll end .- ...__.....,.~.,. .... ,,..,... lllMS COM- IMMG1'J Oii topb ., .....,..,,. nil llfOJdffc'ioft«, &, pt...,. '°""" /Olf CM aprr illilllOil d °"' f'eadm" ...... Md &t ,,.. .... ": ... .,... ~ ,.... ,.,.,,,.... ~ ... .,. ..... Oii topb "' • ... loblrt tl w-,, PDD II• I ' olc ma US> U) pa Tb hl! fOI wtr her I IJ'I I! pol COi pli ha· tVI J re1 • • ... ., .... ....-................ ,. -· -----...--..... ~ ............. -,.~, . ..--... ··Heme Tour .Exemplifies Lido Living Gracious Lido living wUI be exemplified by six homes which will be opened for Lido Isle Women's Club's annual tour . . Scheduled ~om 1 to 5 p.m. Friday, April 26, the traditional fund· r~~m.g event, entiUed C'est La Vie, also will include a tea and art ex· hlb1t m the clubhouse. Leading island artists \\1ll display pa.inti,ngs, sculpture and needlecraft in the main room while a children's art show will be in progress on the terrace. ' Transportation around the island will be provided by English double-deck buses. Residences to be on display, according to tour co-ehafrmen Mrs. E. Terrance Moran and Mrs. Richard McClure, are t h o s e of the Messrs. and Mmes. William McGee, 905 Via Lido Soud · Robert Pick· ing, 122 Via Lido Soud ; Harry Pierce. 444 Via Lido No rd': Robert Mar· shall, 367 Via Lido Soud; Thomas Sherman, 201 Via San Remo, and Robert Redfield, 828 Via Lido Soud. . The dramatic bayfront home of the McGees offers a panoramic y1ew of the south bar. t~e ocean beyond, striking color and design in its decor and a fascinating collection of hand-carved wood in its fur· njshings. . Another ~ovely bayfront home is that of Mr. and Mrs. Picking ~h1ch was designed an.d ~ecorated lo establish a warm, cheery and h~hthearted mood. This 1s achieved throughout the spacious rooms wt~ the use of sunny yellow and b r i g h t turquoise appointments 4grunst a background of brilliant spring green carpeting. . Uti~izin.g the azure blue of the bay and a jewel-like setting for ~e u.nagmative use of pa~tel camelia pink to deep magenta furnish- ings ts the abode of the Pierces. The family's musical interests are featured in the unusual piano bar. Still another view of the bay is ofiered from the Marshall r esi· dence, which combines graceful and leisu re informal living. An un- usual feature is an efficient home office for the busy Newport Beach city councilwoman and vice mayor. Locat~d on an i.nte~or lot is the charming home of the Sber- mans. Designed to give its owners full advantage to pursue their hobby of horticulture, the patio courtyard is abloom with azalea trees shaded by exotic foUage -a view enjoyed from all downstairs rooms . The Redfield home is another ''inside" residence. Recently re~odeled, the home features sophisticated styling and antique decor which lend an old-world charm to the Mediterranean architecture. Of special interest is the authentic Roman bath. • Tickets, at $3. may be purchased at the clubhouse or the tour homes on the day of the event, and proceeds will aid the club's ju ... venile hall project and will help furnish the clubhouse . .----------------.... ----•-:...-=---=--~ ......-~ --~------ PANORAMIC VIEW -Spacious rooms and sunny colors achieve a warm and cheery mood in the Via Lido Soud home of the Rob- ert Pickings and is accented by a backdrop of the bay. Preview- ing the home, one of six featured on the annual Lido Isle Home Tour, are (left to right) Mrs. Jack W. Marshall and Mrs. William Lyle. Irish Coffee Sparks Agenda Artistry Canvassed Returnfog agaln thls year by popular demand to the South Coast Plaza mall will be the Costa Mesa Art League exhibit aod sale. Members in good standing only will be allowed to "' participate in the three-day display, to take place on both levels Thursd11y, Fri· day an<! Saturday, April 18- 20. Represented by the 75 to 100 participating artists will be works in oil, acrylic, wab!rcolor, p a s t e I , stit· chery, papier mache and china painting. A r t i s t s alr~dy registered to exhibit include Stanley B r o o k s • Mrs. Jean Hill, Wade Zint, Vincent FarrelJ. Mrs. Elmo Ashurst, Mrs. Dean Pollo m and Mrs. Grayson McCarty. A percentage of sale pro- ceeds will go toward the league's sdlolarsbip fund, and awards will b e presented in May. Last year the group contributed $700 to deserving and continuina aM students at Orange Coast College and UCI. BEA ANDERSON, Editor TUftdoly. fMll t, IMI CM·NB l"&ff IJ • To accomplish its goals of assisting Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian in its kidney machine program and the Or ange County Kidney Foundation, the Expresso Club needs to commit willing workers to this cause. Adding their names to the roster, which is limited to 40. are Mrs. Richard Ramella (left) and Mrs. John McKerren wbo listen to the report on the Hoag program by Thomas Stadlinger, director of hospital relations and development. Others honored at an Irish coffee in the Baycrest home of Mrs. Leslie Petersen were the Mmes. James Judge, Harvey Pease. John T. Butler. Frank Marshall, A. W. Longridge and Roy E. J une. Stadlinger explained lhe use of a machine, its cost, space requirements and tecbnical training involved. Further information is available by calling ~:rs. Donald ijiel. e x h i b 1 t chairman ~t &4&-8104. TALENT PICTU RED -Behind-the-scenes activity Ap ril 16-20. Studying some of the paintings is Mrs. Lee Gibbons (left). while Mrs. Donald Biel, exhibit chairman, uncrales a work for display. of Costa Mesa Arl Lea~ue's upcoming exhibit find s diligent workers coll~ctmg and storing works which will be viewed and oUered for sale to the public · With Aces Back to Back, Crandmother Deals Stacked Pack DEAR AJ"-'"N LANDERS: Our 7·yt.ar· old dauehW' loved her grandpa Vf!r'f much. He wu a tiod1y person who used to take M.-y fot'" walU aod tell her fasclnatmg st.oriel. Grandpa paued away 10dde1111 two weeks aao. The child was wry unblppy about bJs peaLng away and 1t wu bard for ber to UDd«ltaDd 1'hy a God wbo ls Sood woo.Id take any bet best friend. • . ' . Last 1"ek Miry was liU1nl on her a:randmoc:ber'1 lap. I fieard her aak If God would allo• grandpa to play poke!' ln heaven. Her answer wu, "Of course q,ot. God doe, not allow card pla,yint in heaven." (Grandma alw•.r• hated Sf aodpa 's card pla,Jtng. &!I'd everyone Jmew It. especially o-aDdpe ) Mary WU VWJ Pd about tbla and replied, ••Ob. srllldma, how too bed I That ii what grandpa used to Wte to do besl" La~r my wife and I were discussing the eot>versation. Do you think grandma w&J right lo answer Mary: a! abe did? -Q.rQ. DEAR Q. Q.: No. Tiie chUd w11 1urclrJ111 for reanurnce t1111t her lf&11dpai wa1 ll8J1P:J In huve11. It wa1 Mt Deee118rr' for grudma to itve lier a small ledve no th moral nped ., ean plaJt•I· n th cldld ........ ..., llP ... •••Ject ..... , t.eu her no eoe btn FOR srm: wba& 1oe1 oa la •eann -tlae 'rry 1teti a pel'IOD cu •o la pe11 •. \nd Jttll' iue•i' 11 • tlaat ,.. ... ,. Is up tltue wltli 1c~i baa tO back. DEAR ANN LANDERS : A great deal has been said Co unwed mothers. but one aeldom bun Of reads aeythiJ\g .directed to unwed fathers. Wby ? Aft.er all. It tJ tbe male •ho carries the Med ot We. Doel it not then seem logical that ht be held accountable rcr bJt behavior? ------------------·------ I have three sons. two In their teens. and r have made it clear to alJ three boys that if they get a glrl ln tTouble Lhey are going to marry her -rPgardless. No red-eyed miss ls going to come to THIS house with her father at her side demandin~ that my son do the right thing. I wish you'd dlscuss this in your col· um n. Ann Landers. It's a subject that needs airing. -MOTHER OF THREE DEAR MOTHER: I lfrte -)'OHi IDft 11toald be ta.11rt tb1t tlley bave 1 respo111Jb1Ut7 &owll'd tlte flrll ille7 41te. Mot& boya. 11Jlfort1111atdy, illlak t.ltty an eaUtltcl to everytbh11 C.hlt II tfftred plas wllatnd they cu t.ll a flrl lato. Ot tM ot.ber blld, I don't btlleve a forc:ecl mu'rlafe eolvet 01 pr .. , ' blems. An unwlJUng groom makes a poor husband and a worse father . DEAR ANN LANDERS · I have been married less than a year to a man who has many fine qualities, but - he is an accomplished check dodger. Whenever we are out with another couple, Norman manages to head for the men's room when he sees the waiter coming with the check. If bjs timing ls poor and he Is trapped • at the table. he bas a knack for looking the other way. or he ls so llow about getting out his wallet that aomene else pays. J hate for him to be a 11ponger and wonder why l\ls irlends let him get away with It. How c.an I put an end to it without hitting him head on'i -EM· BAR.RASSED WIFE I DEAR WIFE: Since Norman seems to have an Impediment ln bis reacb, take matters Into your own batd~ Krrp track of whose tum It 11 to pay and \\hen It Is Norman's tun. take thr check from the watter and band It to him. When romantic glances turn to warm embraces is it love or chemistry? Send for the booklet "Low or S e x and How to Tell t h e Dif· ference," by Ann Landers. Enclose a long. stamped. seU-addressed er>- velope and 3S cents in coin with your request Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of the DAILY PILOT. endosing a stamped, self·addre5'ed envelope. --""'--- IWlY f>ILOf They Can Do It . . . .. W ith Their Eyes Closed Applying Touch System, Pretty Faces Made Prettier By PAMELA HALLAN Of ....... .,,,.., ..... ~uesu of Brallle InsUtute of America, Bonne Bell co ... metics ar.d the May Co. Celebrities. Natalie Wood, Marlo Thomas. Rich Little, Kay Cole. The SunJbine Company and the Houston Fearleas were all there to entertain them. tertabunent portion. t b e glrl1 broke into groups of two and the Instruction beca.n. It was a room of bright colors. Gay spring dresses. red and yeUow table flowers. glittering cha.odelien. MAKEUP INSTRUCTION "I'm going to put a band of paper around y o u r forehead so that your bait won't be in the way," said one 1~ted girl to her blind companion. It wu also a room or sounds. They were aJso there for another reason ... to learn how to make a pretty race, how to apply m a t e u p through touch. A room of excited chatter. ol scraping chairs. o f footsteps and an occasional cough. all muted by the overpowering SOUDds of a rock 'n roll band. Each blind girl w a s aHigned a sighted girl, a member of a Mayteen board. to teach her. At each place on the table wu bolt eapeclally prepared by the cosmetic firm for blind ma.keup users. ''Ftel this," she said, han- ding her the band. "Now. while I bold It In pl.ace you pln it on," stie continued, placinl bobby pins in her frlend'a band. Most of all. It was a room of feeling. A feelinc of excitement as hands touched bands and 1mlles greeted milles. Seating beneU a g a I n beside her companion. she turned so that she faced her and smiled. Halt the girls were blind. But they were still normal teen-11e girll, eager to talk about clot.bes, movie 1t.ar1, makeup. The box contained a cleansing agent, cleansing pads. a moisturi%1ng lotion, a liquid makeup bue, a light liquid rouge, a compact with powder, a powdered eyebrow darkener. a n eyebrow pencU, a neutral UpstJck and a colorless lip gloss. "Ob look, Diana, here comes Natalie W o o d I ' ' pointed the sighted Cfrl. Col· or flooded her cbeeu a.a abe remembered. CELEBRITIES They weren't disappointed Saturday as they gathered for lunch In the Regency Room of the Sheraton-West Hotel In Loa Angeles, the After lunch and the en· Diana giggled. Both felt better. The ln1trucdon con- tinued. ''There's a box 1o front of you. Diana. Tab ot1 Ile lid and set it to oat aide." Femin ine 7248 Elaine Lynn Brownfoot Becomes Mrs. Garrett lo an early Saturday bridesmaids were M r t . . _ _...a~n..-ern ... aon...ceullUln~e Robert Gilliam of I>ownej, Lynn Brownfoot becam;the ~e1n11t1!"r cwstn; and bride ol Gail William Gar-Linda May~d ol Downey, Crochet t bl 1 feminine, romantic dreu qulckly of 3-ply fin1ertn1 or dreuy yarn. Low Oounce 11 a r e s sr•celull1 • 10U mcm. Crochet ctr,11 bl open men It.Itch with lacy pUINpple band. Pattern 7248: sllea a'l· 38 Included. rett. and flower eirl was Mary Dr Pbili W b Maynard. · P a s .e r Attending as best man ~rfm:mett th~ double ~g wag Norman Blakeley of ntes 10 the F1nt Methodist Lewl.stoo, Idaho, w h 11 e Church, Garden Grove, for aa.uming usber duties were the dau~ of Mr. and Clar~ Manwaring of Ml'I. 'nlomM A. Brownfoot Lewiston alld J a m e 1 of~ Beach and the Thomae Carroll of Downey 800 of Mrs. Loulla Rode of the bride's cousin. Garf WeJppe, I d ah o . The Roberts of Sida Fe Springs brldtgrooo1 a1lo is the son waa tlle ring bearer, and of the late Mr. Gorman Ger· soloist was Mlss To n 1 rett. Patrice of Bell. Given in marriage by her Following a champagne father, the bride wore a reception in the Garden white organza sheath with a Grove Woman's c i v I c fitted bodice and detaebable Clubhouse, the newlywedl train. Cluatera of seed left on a Palm Springs pearls on a cap of sheer honeymoon. Upon t b e I r orpma caupt her waist return tHJ wW reside 1n Mactb iDulion nil. and she BellfJower. carrted a Bible topped with The bride ts a sraduate of wbite orcbldl. Warren High Sc b o o J , Weartna blue c b 1 ff on Downey lbd now aUends 8beatbs and carryl.ng yellow Oerrttoe Oollege. Her bui· roses and dalJle1 were her bind, 1'bo completed two entoura1e. Serville .. maid yMJ'I of duty with the U.S. of honor wae Mill Rebecca lMrtne Corps, ii a eraduate Smutc of N o r w a l k ; of Lenton HJp School. OCC Dean 'Forgets' Students for Zontians •1000 check to Wllllam L. Bud.Ion Jr., admlnlstrator of Hoa1 Memorial Hospital, Pre1byterian, toward the club's t8(XlO pledge for a teen wing. Mrs. Marie Howu, U10- cl1te dun of student 1cttvi- tles at Orange Cout Col· Ieae, will be the special eue•t when memben of Newport Harbor Zoota Club gather at nooo Tbunday, April 11, hi the Senl« Clti· ·--------zena Recreation Center. Presenttna a clner lm- DISCOVERIES Diane's band1 m o v e d alon1 the table In front of her until tbeJ found the box and tM Ud ,,.. removed. "Rueb U.lde and find a lone bu. Put it In front of the b11 box." ''This · looka like n a i 1 poU1b," 1ald the blind girl, toucbiJlc a 1mall bottle "No it Isn't." nld the teen intb'Uctor, tealin1ly. "Now you'll find three metal tubes/' 1be continued. "The one with the pin on the side goes down firs t." "Is th1a eye1hadow?" "No. It's llpatick." When each tube and con· tainer bad been placed in its proper order each girl waa told what to do with them, bow to apply tbem and in what order. Tbe aightle11 teen did everytb.lng alone. The inetructor not once found anytlinf for her or helped her apply k. 'Tind the bo1 of ap- plkltor1, Olan& ... "Look for tbe indented MRS. GAIL W. GARRETT P•lm Springs Honeymoon FIFTY CENTS ( coina) f lr uch pattern -add 15 cent.I for each pattern for first· class mailing aod aptclal handling; otherwise third· clan delivery w1ll take three week.a or more. Selld to Allee Brookl, Tbt DAILY PILOT, 10 5 Needlecraft Dept., Box 183, Old ai.llea Statl.on, New York, N. Y. 10011. Print Name, Addrett, Zip, P auera Number. Peering 'Feast' Topic Of Fellowship ana and pull up. No• take out one or two cleanllnl pads. 1'I've got two," a al d Dlana.·1 It' I lmpcrtaDt lo know where tt be&inl and ~ and ftlcb way the bl9'1 grow. ltNct« wbeA .., hid Onlabed, "Wblit fla¥Or II th l 1 lipltictt It taat.1 eood." "Put the box back and unscrew the top ot the glus bottle. Place the pad on top of the gla11 bottle and then tip it so that the pad ta moistened. Now, rub It across your forehead first, all over , that's rigbt, no'lf your nose, be IUJ't to 1et ln the crevices because oU hldea there. then your cheeks and chin." FEELING THE WAY "Rub y<J4JI' llQCertip tight- ly OYV the powder and feel wbel'e the brow becla•, then amooc:h oa tbe powder. "Yotr brow1 ,et thinMS', Diena, to don't keep the finfe!' t1at toward.a tbe end. "Tbat '• rit)lt, rd for got. leJ'l1 II ujd the blind g.lr'L "Next Iii the eye lb8dow. Clote your e7et IDd feel across the lida. 1be colcr goes U... Find 1be tube, pull olf tbe tap llld bo&d the base in ODe banchDd pl.lee a finger oa tap ol Ile tube. Rub your, fll>ger &Cl'Oll 1be hump whicb is the color 9tick. Theo nJb it OD yow' eyelid." PRE'ITY FACEI The afterDOoll encled wia pretty face• &Slgliq and ctiatmine and putttnc tlleJr makeup back into tbe1r box· es. In cue anyone twcot. each would h a ' e ta- •tnactlom ill Br&We and • a rlCGl'd to tab bome witb &hem. They wou.lcl alto take borne the meDl<ll"1 ol a warm attemoon. biendsblp, and maybe ewe tbt wordl ol Marlo 'lbomal. "T'4at feels good," she laueMd. The foundatloo makeup wu applied with two fingers and ttlen rubbed In and smoothed. Before applying the rouge, Diana ftll'I asked to find her chffkbooe and follow it across her face. Next came the eye makeup. Lipstick W8IS alJO applied with tile fiogvlt:pt in tbe same manner, mlllinC sure thM 1be COU WU applied within tbe lip line. "M.Y fatber alwa19 mid a. say, 'Nice &Srll don't wear makeup. Ju.t piDClb your d>eekl and bite ~ 1Jp1 and you'll look just ft.De.' "But that burta and It doeen't lut all afternoon.'' lbe smiled. '"' H.av Bad YMt Tri\ who "Next we'll do yow" eyes. "He a1'o IMd, "Ibe nlcelt ttWig you we• ia 1f1W ex• pt"811kl:I. I And Al I Joot around me, I CID aee lw.t all of ,oil .-e beeutiful." Do you know where your eyebrow1 are?" "Ye1." "Run your finger across your brow to feel its shape. "Do you have any ques- tiooa, Diana," asked 1he in- I Pc Kennedy and Nixon Selected Teen-agers Cast Votes NE you'1 a ho ~avp --BJ-GAY lh\llLR_ NEW YORJC (UPI) -A group ol tb1nkinc teen.agers acroas tile country already has cut a vote in tbe presidenUal electioo.s l o come -and t:be two me.n put at the top are Robert F. Kennedy and Richard ft{ Nlxoo. B\rt the teen-ager-s voted before Pre..ideot Joboson's sudden and dramatic an· nouncement he would not be a candidate for re-election. They had put the President third in preference. The name of vice president Humphrey did not show in ~ voting, a p p a r e n ti y because ttley thoughl he would be teamed w l t h Jobo90n in a race. Presidential dlo6oe1 of high ICboolen and their 8ltands on national and in- tematlooal lnuea ceme in a survey of 1,185 s c h o o 1 newspaper editors Scholastic Roto, a pubUca- tion for higb s c h o o l students, made the survey of more t:ban 2,300 editors and 51 r,e.reem responded. Of the 1,185 responding, 19.2 percent of tile editors gave the top tpOt to the New York senator, brother of the late p-esident, wbo with Sen. Eug ene J. Mc- Carthy, D ·Minn., are the two announced candidates ere NeJLX!fk Gov: Nebofl ~litiffl-~ on tDe CW· -------!_5~ A. JWclcefeller ' Midifgan reot·-acene Wli>~ a : .f:;i Gov. Geor~ Romney , empllfiea the ideals beld by Calliomia Gov. Ron a Id youth, 53 percem said yes Yo ~agan and Sen. Cbarles and named IA mere than into Percy, R-Ill. Former Gov. half tbe respooees Sen&tor out G«>rge Wallace of Alabena Kennedy. Next were Percy, Or. received 2.9 percent of the Reag111 and New York simi: votes. Mayor John V. Lindsay. seW1 The publication 1 i s t e d Frequent mention weut also Worr some i111ue1 of the '68 cam· for WllUam Buckley Jr., these paign and Mked the school Barry Goldwater, Edw•d acti\ editors to rank them in Kennedy, Nl.xoo, Rockefeller time order of importance on a and Romney. ~ scale of one to 100. r; full-1 '"'A k ! "'-fll.W.~~ rn.. ey ls&ue 0 we cam-of J paign will be Vietnam. the ,,,... ' "' her students agreed by a 93 \ .. ··:~~~ is tl point rating. Next came • 'fj.~ Vogt civil r ights, 75; inflation 57; I "' · j built crime in the streets, 51 : I : with urban problems, 47, and · · cour farm problems, 27. d<>es Fifty percent of t h e too i atudenu faV'Ol"ed escalation Or of the wv in Vietnam; 45.3 eel* percent Coll'YOC"ed negotiation fie ld (1f' witbdra~l, and 4.7 per-horn cent gave no answer. volv Sixty-two percent of the past students Mid they agreed f.rier with ttieir parems re~ardlng a wJ U.S. policy on Vietnam. selli Most of them -59 percent pane -said they favor the same brea political party as tbelr parent. and 41 percent in- dicated they and t b e l r parents agreed oo 1'rffiden- tial candidate preference. Asked if there were a seeking Democratic party Auxiliary nomination for the highest RENT a 10uch&SeW snit~· oUice. American Legion Hall In McCarthy rated a mere Costa Mesa l1 the setting for f.lve-tenths of a percent, meetings of the Auxiliary to SW'prising1y low with tbeae Barraco 1249, Veter1n1 of tffOiS in vtew ol bl.I huge World War I. The first Tues- support from Y o 1 u n t e e r day of each montb members youth CN!>pAlpn. gather for • b 1l • I D e • I bJslaER First time I Jumbo 1988 Needlecraft Catalog -bun· dreds of designs, 8 free pat· tern1 (includes d e 1 l I n e r sweaters) Instructions. In· 1lde. Knit, crochet, em- broJder. 50 cents. EnaUon for the en- ent of ber boltes1e1, Howes will offer Direc· tor of 1 Female College 1n 1868. Around Nm>n, the tonner vice lfflion at 7:30 p.m. and the pJ'ellldmt Mio ls 1be only ac· thtrd Tuesday tbe7 meet for tive Republtoan candldate, a social and potluct at e A Sptrttual Feast la the ti-m~ at 7:30 n.m. Thurs-rated aimo.t e'Yfll will Kw· p.m. Ue of a sped.al Easter pro-day, April 11. Further in· nedy, .t 19.1 per c eat . ---------- ~$2~ Boot o111 JW1 Rue• - complete patterns -lnex- pentlve, euy to mate. 50 cents. Book No. 1 -Delaxe QalJ&a -18 complete pat· terns. Send llO centa. Book No. 2 -M111eam Qdta -patterns for 12 quilts. 50 cents. Boot No. 3 -QaDh for Today's Llvl11. New. n· citing collection -15 com- plete patterns. 50 cents. Book ef Prize Afpua - Knit. ttocbet 12 afll!ans. 50 cents. Business Women The Ont and tb1rd Th\a'1- d11 memben of Newport Harbor B u 1 l n 11 1 and ProfealooaJ Women's Club Inc. COD¥toa at e p.m. ln Mtta Verde Country Club for meettnp. Mn. P. R. Fox. 541 ·1348. wtn answer ~ reprdtns club Mrs. Howes bu been a member of the OCC faculty 11nce its ihcepUon in 1948. She served u a111stant dean of womeh at UCLA and ls 1 member of the Zonta Club and served on the Cblldrtn'1 Home Society board of directors. PresenUy al'le ii serving a three-year term on the Cos- ta Men UnJted Fund board. Mrs. George P. Zebal, president, will pre1ent a ' ~ to be presented to the fcrmation ls available by JOOmon's percentage 0 f Kids Like to . ..... uc..n Mrs. Oalvin Rice at pref-nee was 18 a Women's Fellowship of the ~ ....... ·· · 'Ask Andy' 962-8809. Next, in order of voting Fountain Va ll ey:•• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;..I Presbyterian Qiurch. Mn. Clayton Sharpe will open her horn~ for the ' Willi TM( fXClUSM'.1 ,.. .. tt ...... 1'11t, ..... Ill .. .............. 11nM Syst-. fGf . ....... tlwlM flow, Sllllt Needle tMt belps Jl)ll SM betttf_. ... btttwflt- 1tnlcllt. rlt-111 • dlei.tltl:MI, .... ... ..., ... ,...., ,.............,. .... _..,....,. ••f lNGlfU1 .. r SINGER ......... ~ ......... " .... ~ .,.,.llV n1 •·tu •• , • ., 'H '" Ecli119•r •• t .. ch, H7-1 041 Hv11tl119tet1 ... ch CW, ... ....,.. 15014 Ltltwell•r LA I-JIU l• Mir•cl• C.11t., c:...w-1r1 ... 1 . ~ S40.2'U s.wtti c. ••• l'lete ........ .. ,, a..,... .. 1Jo-40IO 0r...,.c......,"- s.e. • o.-+--. ICI JJt41 . ......, .. --...... 1>00 eti tlie Mal TA 1-"'40 ...... '•r\ Ceder c....w ... llOO Her\.r bl. Kl 9.1191 H.,llM C..... J E sea drE It i ey• F Sizi 22~ lb\ in. ~ coi --tel' aft! ott de! wt M1 Pl 23: N. Al Ill ....... _...... .. "W._._., -........... -~-----_...,.. ~,.,.. ..... --., .... ,, ..... .,,... ......................... ~.,,..,.. .... -·-----.. .. --t• ......... j~ -: ,....,,_.., • l utsday, April CJ, 1%8 DAILY PILOT Jli Horoscope Taurus: Look to Future for Progress Indians Scout New YMCA Having a pow wow at the grand opening of the Orange Coast YMCA, In the Back lay area of Newport Beach, are tbiee kinds of Indians. Jerry Sanders, YMCA Community Program Director, who is half Cherokee, chats with Madhu Trivedi of India, the first Hindu member of the new Y, and Mrs. Ora Childres. who is a member of Apache Tribe, Y Indian Maidens. Part-time Supplement Tired of Housework? NEW YORK (UPI) -So ding cakes. you're tired of being ''just The opportunities, th e a housewife." Anc1. say you rewards-"and tbe pitfalls of havF a business idea which starting your own business is a lead-pipe cinch to sue· or taking a p a r t · ti m e -~pplement. tb6--salaried~· comp1.11y 'family's income. all are explored in a· new Your idea may be to go publication by a coup!~ of into real estate sales to get women who run part-time out of the household rut. businesses. Or. maybe something as The women are Mrs. simple as packaging and Rap ha e 1 Scobey o. f selling scented s a c he ts . Scarsdale. N. Y ·: who 1s Wol'l'Rm have succeeded in· a free-lance wnlet:, and these and a myriad of other Mrs. Richard McGrath of activities called the part· Mamaroneck, N. Y.. who time job. runs . an advertising-public Sometimes they grew into relations concern. ~ o t h fuU -time jobs. Like the case women have sman chlldre.n of Je nie Graves now in and both operate from their n · ' homes ~er 70s, ~ho foun~ed and The~ b o o k , "Creative ts the rehred pres1~ent of Careers for Women" (Simon vo.gue Dolls, ~nc. which was & Schuster l. covers the ~Ill on ~ne Idea -a doll whole spectrum of the part. With movmg eyes. Now of time job. They talked with course e v e r y dollmaker does the same and more 750 women acros~ th~ coun- t . k. g toys lifelike. try for case h1stones -oo in ma 10 , · women who wanted to keep Or, say you re. a~ ex-their hours flexible because c.ellent cook. Catering is one or need for f u I f i 11 i n g field and you can work rr~m household obligations too. home. One s~ccess story lJl· In an interview, the volve~ a widow w h 0 s e authors I i s t e d some p~stnes were the tallc off guidelines in running a fnends, and pretty soon o business. just held OQ a little longer." Another is procrastination. "So many women have an idea but will say, 'WeU. I'll tackle it as soon u the .Boy Scout Fai:r is -0ver.' " Don't try to do It yourself !n legal areas. Conault an expert on trade practices. on laws with reference to zoning and health, for in· stance. Don't forget to test your market. Be sure there are not 10 other c a t e r i n g services if you're planning one. Make the tests in· formally among people you think you might serve. If it's a product, it must be something different or better than an existing one. And don't start without the wholehearted support of the whole family. Husband and children must lend en- couragement. and o ft e n help. Las Olas Will Travel WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10 By SYDNEY OMARR ''The wise man eontrols hls destiny , . , Astrology polnts the way." ARIES (March 21 ·April 19): Changes occur at place of work. Your routine at home or office uodergoes transformation. Don't be cau&bt off guard. Some meth®s are to be discard- ed. Ride with the tide. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Distant n!l&tive could ask favor you regard as im- posioon. Check A R I E s message Be wllling to tear down in order to rebuild. Don't try to bang on to pa.st. Look to fu~. Ac· ctnt progress. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Cond.ttlons at home may shake you. Wbat you are used to u n d e r g o e s change. If immature. this cre&ites vivid controversy. But if wise, you enjoy renovation. Be considerate of one who is disturbed. CANCER <June 21 • July 22): How you live, bow lov- ed one demands to live could create dilemma. Be wjlllng to make domestic adjUBtmen.t. U open·mind~. you accomplish more than if stubborn. Act accordingly. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Home appllan&es. products related to your comfort are emphasized. What y o u spend. what you can afford. share spoUigl>t. Be realistic. Revere f a c t s . Disregard false flattery:-- VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 22) · Some may criticize you for unorthodox d r e s s , ex· pressions . ideas. Key today is to accept rapid change. Don't try to hang on to what appears trooition. Instead. highlight progress. LIBRA (Sept. Zl-Oct. 22): Some notions which were preconceived are due to change. Financial pressure today plays prominent role. You gain if you know when one phase is finished. Study VIRGO message. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 · Nov. 211 : Cycle high but some of your closest associates are extremely restless. P u t across viewpoint. But don't appear arrogant. Maintain senae of balance. Be a gracious winner. · SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 • Dec. 21 ): A factor which relatives. close neighbor. kept concealed is likely to a w.bole town a~ she starte .. ~ Don't overextend, they ad· selling her skills. and e" vised. Don't promise more Las Olas Toastmistress Sa le Benefits panded the bus~ess to than you can d e 1 i v e r Club, Huntington Beach. will breads. e~n to giant wed· whetller it is in services, travel to Chino for a joint meeting with the F'ro!Ura Group Pro·1ect prducts or yourself on a Rhetoriques in the Con~na Always Right part-Um..: job. Institut f w Th """s. Olarence A. Nisson, U you sign up for three e or omen urs· m .. day, April 11. president of the Emma days a week. be sure those Area women interested in Sanson O\apter, United three are free. Have sufficient capital attending the joint meeting Daughters of t h e Con· and the amount varies with wilJ be welcome and further f~riacy, will open her San· the J'ob you take on. But information regarding the ta Ana home for the next tn·p may be ob"-'ned by meeting, to take place at 1 be sure to have enough to wu keep a business afloat until calling Mrs. Gary Giles. 545· p.m. Thursday, April 11. the returns start coming in. 2671. or Mrs. J o s e p h Members and guests are whether six weeks or six Nebelsky, 962-4548. asked to bring w h i t e . Mrs. Giles will speak on elephants. The sale supports months. whether your Jn· the Art of Loafing and Mrs. the group's project of sup-vestrnent is a major or small one. ,Some women Nebelsky will present an plying historical books to ci· forget that they are not go-_ed_u_c_atJ_·on __ caps __ u_Ie_. _____ ty_a_nd_c_O\m_ty_li_b_r_an_·_es_._ 9200 ing to be paid until after they've given their own la· bor and bougbt supplies. Don't forget to include your labor in the initial price to the customer. Many women forget to charge for their time and later. wben they need to hire more belp, find the necessary price to the client is more than he wants to pay. Many businesses flounder on over-gener06ity. Don't give your services or pro- ducts to relatives and neighbors. Charge them. The two women told of one Interior decorator w h o fioundet'ed because her fiHt clients were relatives and there was no income. Don't neglect professional record keeping right from the beginning. Records ~ necessary for taxes, but at all times you alao should L 41" • --ttr _ _, know what is coming in and v7 .IUMtMt Ill~.... goi ng out . Don't Every aeason la the right guesrtimate, Write It down. season for a eoft. gnceful One of tile biggest pitfalls d.reM jusit like this ooe I Sew is *k of persistence. The It in all one fabric, or witb authors said ttley he#d eyelet a Jeeves. -;oiiiwriiiiiiiiandiiiiiiiiiioiiiiwiiiriii. iii.iii, Hiiiiiiiit iiihiiia•dl Printed Pattern 9200: Ball11 Sizes 14~. W-h. 18~. 20~. 22 lh . 24 &,; • 218~. Sl ze 18 i,, 'bust 37) takes 3~ yds. 3$- in. Think , ~~, SIXTY ·FIVE CENTS ln coins for UCh patil. -n ----add 16 ~-4'!~1R1oo-1Nll1. .. _1 ____ -f tlm for ent-dlN mdlnt and special b a II d 11 II I ; otbenrile t b l r d • c l.t 11 ci.Mvay will take tine weeks or m<Jl'e, Send to N Marian Mar:ln. tbe DAILY TH/ K ... PILOT. 442 Patttrn Dept., J lnhl 232 West llUl SL. Nn York. CA ~ N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, ~ I ADDRESS "!i!h_E!:.. SIZE -=-"--:::. • llld l'l'fLE IWllllA.n. ,_ ______ _.. -----.,__ ... AND OF THE WEBC Make It a ftttive day with ripe rid btrrl ... In ahortcakt or sundae, eltgantly ltf'Ytd with our Imported ellverplattd btny apoona. Omit• ralttd frul\ d"ign In gilt bowl of spoon. Could b9 tMy'l'9 helr1oo~ eYtn attbla txceptloMI pna._--=-~· our apeolll pr1c:e -..0 th• pair S~VICK'S c/~~1"7 1 a ~ASHION ISLAND N~WP'OU H ACH •••·ll•o be revealed. Utllhe added knowledge. Don't cast first stone. Strive to achieve mature understanding. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jan. 19): Emphasis con· Unues on travel plans which are subject lo change. Friend provides r e p o r t whlch causes you to revise long-range outlook. Could affect publlc.ations. written mater1al. AQUARIUS I Jan. 20.Feh. 18): Stress ability to com· municate thoughts. Ideas. Some meanings today are obscured. Key is to con- ' TRAVEL LIGHT ••• RAIN OR SHINE IN OUR GLEN HAVEN COATS cenlrate on UJ-depth review, re porting . Dlsca :d superficial indications. PISCES <Feb. 19-March 201 : You require approval of someone at a distanct'. Realize this. Keep com· munication lines open. Don't skip details. If thorough, you Bri ght, light coats for spring that can weather the ....,. r Don't let th eir sunny good looks fool yoo ••• they'll repel those ra indrops! A blend of Orlonsacrylic and wool liftedwtth acetate. Nine button styling or sinale breasted T-slot podet. traveler in yellow, blue, pink or green: 8 lo 18, an Coal and Suit Shop. are likely to succeed. Check legal papers. G E N E R A L T E N· DENCIES: Cycle high for VIRGO , LIBRA, SCORPIO. Lunar position good for fishlng. Special word to ARIES: if versatile, you make significant gain. Newport 11 Fashim Island Newport Center • 644·2200 •Mon., Thurs., Frt. 10:00 till 9:30 Onter days 10:00 till ~ ' DAILY PILOT T~. Aprtl 9, 1968 Area Pianist Makes Big Play for Award GAIL FIGNER June Date Bride-elect To Marry In ·summer Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence H. Figner of Sherman Oaks have disclosed the engtge- ment or their daughter. Gail F1gner to Kelly T. Marlin. son of Mr. and Mrs. Ken· neth C. Marlin or Hunting- ton Harbour. The bride-elect Is a A routhlul Newport Beach pianist has woo recoplition. Daniel Miller placed sec- ond lo Section V (17-21 years ol age) of the 1988 Piano AudJtions sponsored by the Musical Arts Club of Orange County. The event toot place in the Santa Ana ffigh School auditorium. First place was given to Gene Robinson of Santa Ana and third pl.a« went to Miss Michele McCartney of Villa Park. In SecUon JV (14-16) win- ners were Miss M a r y Schmierer of Santa Ana. first. Bill Bogenreif, G1.rden Grove, sec'ond. and Miss Viera Ann Chum!, Sant.a Artl, third. Winnen ln Section ID CU. 13 were Miss LaVaun Sa laets ol Anaheim, ftrst, Regan Smith of Anaheim and Mlss Kimberly Nordeen of FuJlertoo, tied for second, and Brian TerreU. Garden Grove, third. Section II C 10. ll) winners were Regan Smith. first, Sheryl Sh~rs. aecond, and Peter TarltoU and Janet Jolly, tied for third. Gary Lohrey wa1 flnt place winner In Section J (under 10) with second place going to Kristy Lane and Renee Ad.tinlon placi.Dg third. graduate of Van Nuys High Scbool and now is a student at Pierce College. Her Clance, pre•eotly stationed with the Navy ln Vietnam. u an alumnus of Notre Dame High School and attended Pierce. strumental audition• spon· will take sored by the club Included Miss Christine ErmacoU, The wedding place June 16. Fountain Valley, firat In secUon m. Strini Dtviaion, Jamea Hwnpbre7, MCOOd, and Satmdta NelJOll, third. Miss Ermacoff alao re- ceived ~ R1ckenbad:er Guitar Award. w. and tbe l Hansen Music Publilhlng Company Award, SSO. j In String Divulon, Sect.ion II , first place was Ira! Pelman, with Jacqueline Hoffman, second and Johan· na Matbewsoa, third. Robert C. Wright placed Llrst in SUing Division, Sec- tion :. Second was Uavld Acosta and third was Kaye Boger. In Section m. wind in· strument dJvislen, first was captured by Robert Sperry, second was David E. Gray, and thJrd was Terry Sharon. First place in Section l for wind instruments w a s William Horslein. Cindy Silverman, r1utist, Costa Mesa was second and Lorna Kathleen Truhan, third. Jn vocal audiiJons. win- ners of Section IV (~27 1 were John Cusley, first, and Unda Peterson, second. In Section lil (21-24) 'first we n t to Delreen Hatftirlcbter, second was Orinda Barton and third, Lynn Scbroeder. - Jeannine Altmeyer was llrst in Section II ( 18-20) wli.Ue Cheryl Stoltz took se- cond and Deborah Hatfield, third. Home GfINDLE5 log iv€ a f~fr fig8t Our glorious new colleciton of candles comes from an improbable place ... Freemark Abbey, a former winery in the heart of the Nepa Valley grape country. Each candle is fashioned by hand from sheets of beeswax or honeycomb . . . no molds, no ma- chinery , no automation ... nothing but serene housewives who use such fam iliar tools as kitchen forks, carrot scrapers, rolling pins and pencils to shape end decorate the candles. The grace· ful designs are dreamed up by Barbara Hurd, and then the production method is figured out by husband Le s, who says candles tranquilize children and make a woman more beautiful! In Section I (15-17) Kathy ----_ _J!~i~r W2Q fju!._J,-...' "+t-------Webb, second and Mary Weddings, Troths Pilot's Deadlinesv To ·avoid clisappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAlL Y PILOT Society Depart- ment prior to or within one week after the wedding. For engagement announcements it Is su~gested that the story, also accompanied With a black and white glossy picture, be · submitted early. U the betrothal announce-. ment and wedding date are six weeks or less apart, only the wedding photo will be ac- cepted. To help fill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, forms are avail- able in all of the DAILY PlLOT officee. Further questions will be answered by Social Notes staff members at MZ-4321 or 494-9466. Howell wu third. Section A (10.14) winner was Stephen T h o m a s • Robert CarUale, second and Mary Dover, third. AU first place winners In the vocal, ln1trument.I and piano auditions will be presented In a public con· cert April 20, 7: 15 p.m., In SaddJeback High School, Sant. Ana. Installation I ..._ _ __. ~ Snnnd Finalized ~ crooi~-,; I.. your sewina Plans f o r ilstallation 6 machine: ceremonies. to be conducted later l11 April, will be detail· ed by Flight 19, U. S. Air Force Mothers w h e n members meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 11, In the Hona Kai Hall. Santa Ana. Honored ,uests will be Stall Sgt. and Mn. James R. Rice of Santa Ana who are being transferred to Honolulu. The group received two special hooors In recogniUonl or Its wort. Air Force Col. C h a r I e 1 R. Beaver presented an award In "recognlUoo of devoted services in assJsting the recrultinc Ml'Vice In the ef- rort.s or world peace" and Mn. Jean B. Miller Sr.,1 presideot. w as recom- mended for a "pin of ex· cellence" for her out.land- ing contributions In the same area. Your fingers will Oy YOU will relax while you DZs Convene crochet eadl p e t a 11 e d square. Crochet a weal th of ex -Hosting the P r o v I n c e quirite things with euy Convetitlon In the Sed· square -pillows. scarf, dlebact loo, Saata Ana will cloth, spread. PaUem 7394: be DZs by the Sea. square 5 Inches In No . 30 Registration will be at and 7 lo ltring. 9·30 a.m. with the general FIFTY CENTS l'=<llns) for 1esslon opening at 10 a.m. eacb pattern -add 15 cents Saturday. April 20. Guest for Heh pattern for first-s~er will be Mrs. ste,Jey clan mailing and special Kyle, grand national vice han1lln&: othenrl~ third-president ot philanthropy ol~ clats deilvery will take Pi Beta Phi. ct _ , the DXlt --•sun tbrte •eekl or more. Se~ Prtm 1 o & Needlea'art M.,.. Seartty Wftt1 ~:°°r:e!.&\~~.~ FALSETEEtH loott Prtnt·Name, Mdrtts. At An TI -----fJP7Y•u.tn N1mbtr. o.-."" ta,_..-,-'•.:~ "'1 el Jumbo Ull8 111 r 11$. W'Obbllnc.or*°PPtllS ,,_, NtedJ.cratt Catalog -hun-••UM~ u~ ror-.. .-curtt1 a.nd -.. comton, J\.ltt Clrtll'~ , drtdl of clelfos. f trte J>ll· ",a1;.t~nna oa mir ,1 .... ·-· (t~·--d I I p ~ ,. .. ....,. .,,._, ...,.... uu-s • • 1 n e r, --... •Unt ....... "° pae~. ~ .,,......) tnJtructlom in-, .... ., a.~ dlft• Hdoalcurt tnalll' -Loi-•-•t, __ .._ .0-tUIW ........ ..,.. --u.a '° / -. AIU .... UWlllllt, em· ._.~._"" ~ ........... cmta. Olel'~all eQS-.... J, ( . . .... -.-.. .. . . -. I Singer 7-Point • Home Tune-Up Only$3 75 Clll llllU .... Wt'W _.,.. ..... . .... ...,., ... . ... , ____ l 7-hllt Mt1111 Tltlt·U' ). Adjust. bNnc• tensions. 2. Adjust llbfic llandlnc medlanism. 3. Dt-lint tlll'NCI lllndlinc medlllli1111. 4. Adjust bett twioft. 5. Check wirilll for a fety. •. l.lllricat• ll*lllne. 7. hlsplct. Nbrictt• "'*'· 150?4 L.ltwt lltr lA 1.nu l • ¥'••'• Ct11ter c..t.M ... 8rlatal I Sw11fl-•r 540.16)) Sovth Coul '1t1t hdee Go.we ttJI Ch.,..,.,., 5)0.4010 o ...... c .... ty ''•u ~ o ............. ~ 2'194~ JOI W .... St. .... ,.. UOO.., tllt Mall TA 1·7140 ...... ,.,. C.111., Cost9M ... 2100 Htrkf 1•4 (I t -1 ltl H.,llor C.11ter 'AT,..._.." ,,.. ....... ~ \ 1t the entr1nce to Uclo lJe s sas 2 1 nus 1 7 SJ J 33 3433 VIA UDO NEWPORT IEACH ' ' OPEN DAJLY 9.0 a Gift Shop GREEN IRIS LEAVES Set of four flat candles. 4.00 BAMBOO CANDLES In green that looks just like the reel thing or O,ientel red, blue. 6" 3.50 IO" 5.00 12" slims, 3.50 peir SCALLOPED "CHANTILLY" Locy, textured, 6 colors. 18'' 5,50 "RIBBON TWIST" Smooth end graceful in ten spring colors. 12" pa ir 2.00 CRYSTAL CANDLE HOLDER H~ndcrafted glass. The pair 7.50 BEESWAX ROUNDS Hand rolled from natural honey- comb. White. colors. 3x'4" 3.00 3x8" 5.00 2x8" 3.00 "SILHOUTTE" TWISTS Flame burns down the center, leav.ing beeswax twists intact. Spring colors. 12" 2.00 I 8" 3.00 SCONCES ind HOLDERS that do more then hold candles. With smashi ng color, unique design, they purposely .set a mood. FLOWER WALL SCONCE Yellow, orange, white. 25" 32.50 POPPY-WHEAT SCONCE M&tte red poppies. 19" 47.00 LEAF CENTERPIEcE Subtle enomel finish , 10" base 37.00 s• 1 7 a SJ a IS I 673-6360 .. __ .__ _..-.. Pl D G ,....... 6+4E 00 I ,WZ.e fOI JI - ,.. .. .... ~ ... --......... . ... .. ,.... . . ,.. .., . _. -" ' . . . . ........... _, ... ._, ..... ·-.. -~ PEANUTS DR. KILDAU 1y Ken laJd fM NOT TltYI~ 10 NAl<f A i:ooL Of-'IOU, SIR. I SAID IT WOULD TAK£ A MIAACl!. ,_ __ ._ LI~ MR. F£RKKO 6\JARA~TfflN9 NOTHING YOJLD HAPPEN TO l<ILDARE1 OR TO A~Y • eoov l!L5E ON SOARD 1l11S SHlP··SHOOLO ll1E DOCTOR HAPPEN JUDGE PARKER MOON MULUNS ,ANoTHE~ t>;\"T~ .. ~llTM HARRY Loe't(~, Miss s.? TUMBLEWEEDS HEY, GREEN Gll..L.S! lHEY'RE GONNA BURN THE PRISONER AT THE STAKE T'NITE! YOU 13~1liERE? MISS PEACH 1'0 l!lfUNG PR. l<l~RE &AOC .•• ~D so, KJN~RGAATEN a.m . .o~, "'°"' .5+40ULO J<EAL.JU i'HAT' SCHOOL. IS IMPORTANT IN -rMAi . IT PREPAl(eS vou FOR. iHe MARO, iOU'7H, T"EA~e~us GAME OF L-tFt!. DElllE DEERE .. TO 6110W UP! MM? I 5H wni., You C.AN INFORM MOON MY lt>E-' \.. MAN SO F-'R 15 1,b-L.L., DM~I<, AND ,ABSENT ... By Tom K. Ryan ......... _--e_ By Al Smith NO, OON'T TELL ME! I KNOW w+IO IT IS! By Mell Tu E s·o ~ Y Af"lltll t ! V f NI N (, ':00 9 Tltt Ill ,...,.: (t) (60) ltrry Ounolly. 0 Tiit St• Hffr Ntwt: !Cl 160) Robert Aberntlhy. I CJ Sttft Allt!I Siie•: IC) 1601 Gyp· sy Ao$11 Lu comic Richard Pryor 1nd sonebird Jackie de Shanno" ao· pur with Steve In t sketch entitled ''G111n Who's Comins to lunch'" Al$0 lt1tured are Smokey AoblMOn and The Miraclu. tnd Th• Stebbin1 Doas. 0 Sit O'Cloct Mft1r. MAd111'1 ltib" (comedy) '49-Spencer Tr.cy K1th1r1n1 Hepburn. l :SO 9 9 ((l 1'4 ShllM NMr: (Cl (60) Tht Auocithon loiM comtdy star N1osey Ruutll In tht cuut spoU11ht Ruutll plays 1n lllsur· lll<lt ultsm1111 medial e11mlntr· underta~er •ho otters the •1le ol htnpecked Geo111 Appleby (Skelton) a ~ck11• dul for her husband. Tutsdly, April 9, 1968 0 (l7l rf.) It Taht • fltltf: (C) (60) "Tht R1domlr Mlni1turt" St· rurlty pohce clost in ts Mundy ~ttempls to rescue a 11rl held H hoslla• lor lht retun1 et her ft· ther ln1 ~1hn 1uesls m Mtn Crrfhn (C) lllO) m Wand«l~st (C) t 10) @!) El Ju1c11 dt lot Hrl4!s t :OO Q ~ !6HuHdtJ NIRflt at tht HE LIVES AGAIN -The late Ernie Kovacs, above, Movies: (C) "1tctti1111 Sttrf (com· wiU come to life tonight in an hour of comedy cull· ~!n.'~h;;i.~~~~. Br!:do~n o=.~ ed Crom eight of his television specials. It will be compt4e to swindle an Amerie1n seen on Channel 7 at 10 p.m. Sight gags, pantomine. tourist out of $25.000. Freddy Bani· blackouts and pies in the face will all be a part of son (Brando) and LJwrerice Jamison the incongruity of sight against sound comedy. m Tttlllll Ftk: (Cl (601 Flnels of tht Miss Teen USA Beauty Puunl The ne-oi Miss Tttn Queen U~• w•ll be~'" h" r"tn In th' m1~\'I nt ~o·t~ot and emtem•nt. with top tl!l'k arnu115 perform1111 (Niven). two cads •itb a knack for r.-----------------------us1n~ charm to w ract l11&e sums of money horn •e~llhv women. meet nn th~ rr~nch Rrvie11 where •"f'h •s hu"f olv1n1 ho~ tr>~~ m "'"' 0u" 1J01 fJ!l TV Hip Sdloel: "Enahsh Gram· mu." Stc0nd of thrH ltl30ns Oil p1011tr punctuation. f!)Obt1sit11 fl) '"'fnon W..t (C) (301 el TV Wv'°"I Osurt TF,l,FVJSION VIEWS Assas ina ti on Cuts Laugh-in 1:30 0 Tiit ,,_, .... (C) (~) m .-d1111·. 11.., <lo> 1:30 fJ ~(fl Cood Mtrnillc, WO!ld: (C) (30) Oise jockev Dave Lewis be· comes wound uo in a yun about an unravtllnc b1rc1in sweater. Tht store n chan,.s his· unraveled s•ealer -Ollly becluM it heloJ soonsor lht rtdio show-and Dav• !'-----------------------· lhink! t1us speclal trutment is By CYNTHIA LOWRY Em 1ota.i111 !ht Mttt tlf Wttvrlty rn HntkiPlll 34 7:00 fJ CIS Cve11in1 N ... : (C) 1301 W••ter Cron~1le 0 Hvnlley-lrinkltY lltt*I IC) (30l unl1ir fJ {fj) (JI Wf'10: (C) (301 ''C.tch 1 Hero" Dtlechvt Haines starthu for Iha "min i~ uniform" wllo wn seen beatln1 t drunk lo death (R) 0 TtMpe: (C) (901 ODii MrGulrt. -----... -·-m h uport It lrtvtl (C) (30) A Ot•ttl Vallty o.,,: (Cl (30) m Cow. ll1111n'1 ,,.,. Ce11f1rtftU ''Out •f I~• V1lley of Dtath " llfwO I mt.,,her~ nl 8 W~ROn l111n stranded ' f!l Chine HHTtll 1n Oulh 1/llley "' oul to brin1 I help I 10:00 " 'i9 18 CBS Nl!WI Spec11I: (t:) I 0 F Troop ( 11)) 160) '7ht Great American Novel" Thi\ new concept of pruenllnl lit· ft' I I ••e Lucy (JO) uature on television focuses on 1 (')~·I' t••'s lslind (C) (10) • A•bb•tt." by Sinclair Lewis and ''Th• Gr•pu ol Wrath." by John £r:) fmdo"! l111'l frff (C) '\t••~htc\ Eric Severeid reoorts. "1th Pat H1n1l1 i nd ll1charcf Boont m A1ma de Mr Al"'1 IS nm1tors 7:JO II fit r• I 01kt111: (C) (60) Judy! mnquer•d~ •s •• American so"e th1mp lller she fin~s th1 real ast10 chimp 1n the 1unale and dons he1 h•lmel Munwhile Si lly lhe spact rh1mo 1s rn1!1•~•n for l11dy but whf1 11!• foils lo re•non~ lo d1 recl•ons Paula 1 •• ,., •h• h•• 1m n!l•r~ (Ill I 0 'l3 (6) I Oturn ot Junn11: (C) 13111 "J•~nn1e 01 the liaer'" Jun·I nit is eh m1nated by her look alike !Iller in the competrtion 101 Tony.I l'il Ceor1• P'utnam """ (Cl (60) II r1r !l!!mt'J The Ce111tdJ of Ernie Koncs: (C) (601 P101ram 1nclude.s 10me of the be\t and most famous oort1on\ &I spee11ls "t111en. produred and d1rect,d by tllt lale ~n1td1~n r •ni• K•YAU A ft•lure will be tht N111nh1 Tllo the w•y nut. 1ll·anthrooo1A mus1ti1I aroup I Iha\ t<cwacs cr••l•d l m Alu Drtltt News (C) (60) m Cr1mophon1 to Crocwy Sptdaf (C) (60) CR) all 1\t Tof Thal Crtw Up: ''lht I OC:ky Devil " R1t/larrl O•• 1nd Edna May Olrvtr star with MIJ'Y Foy In this I 925 him th1I follow~ lhe trials and 111bul1hon~ ol • crnss·counlry n1ntor rar r>rt (Rl I 0 Happy Wtndt1u1: (C) 130) Slim 1nd Henrietta 811nard vlsrt like Powell on 1 three0d1y boat lour nl' !ht Arizona waterway The 160 milt len1lh of tilt like ls studded w•th1 Kenic buµtlts, known her~tofore 1 I Pl fo•os d• [•n••• only lo tndi1111 and exolorers 0 ti?13)Carrl~n·s Cor1lll"' IC) 11:00 fJ £tm11 O'Clock Re rt: (C) 130) (60) 'The Grab • The Go11llu are Jmy Dunoh po ulled on to try lo smuule • b1by ' -th~ only su1Y1v1nc mtmbtr of • 0 The 11th Hour NIWS: (C) (JO) defed1ni sc1t nhsl's f•moly-out of r.oor1e ~k1nne1 Germany (R) j 0 So110~·1n: ''The Wolfman" (lw· Cltln" (drama) '52 -Jnhn W~yn• O Molhon $ hlt1v11: "ll1i ln'I Mr· rnrl '41-Cl11Jd• Rains. I N~ncy 01$llll Spec11I •R'"' II •• fJ Ne•u: (C) rJO) Rnler w~rd. s1cned to the invnhul•M nf • O Mqvl'' (Cl "fury 11 5'"uulen' world wide terror 11nt h••d111•r by" hc!v,nlurel 'F.3-Ptt•r Cu\h ,,,.d rn H1w111 •I Jnhn fr•vr ITT JM ,.,.., (Cl 11111 m Truth If Cen~Ulftttt (Cl Pll m 1'"'1 liltMn (60) fl!) N£T l'l1yllouM: ''llnclt V•ny~ ·I IRl (D Mcw1e: "The l1dr1 tf l1hrshal ll rtnn•n" (wf'ternl '57-Jim Davis. @!) llWll de IH UtrtflH a:on o ~ r,1 Jtrry Lew11 Show: 1c1 (60) Guest st1r Mtl Torm• ol•~ 1 n•wly dlVOrOd man who hires H111 K111 (Jerry) u hlJ ne'I J1p1nu• houseboy. and, '" 1nother comfdl sketch. spec11t auest Nueltt FA bray ts stuck w11h Jmy H h•• has bt•n husband 11:30 II Mnvw "loo• 81rl '" Anett" I (d11m1) 'S9-Rirh~rd 811r1on Cl11rt Bloom 0 ~ (6, flit Ton1gltt Sho• (C) 0 01 ( 3 Joey l 11hop Show: (C) lney Is on vacahM th" wn~ and Intl~ f10ldJ •nd fllo W11snn sm1 ~' g11•s1 hn•t\ m Lu Crane Show (C) 0 ROLLER GAMES-Live! (C) 12:00 m Naktd C•tJ * T-B1°0S vs. DETROIT I 12:30 m Adltn Tllntrt: ''Ghost Tnwn." II Roll11 Camu (C) (2 hr) m l'mword (C) IJOI II> V Usurpadof WEDNESDAY DAYTIME MOVIES I :00 II Mnvrt. "The l t&tnd of I OM Ooollf" (d11m1l '!>~MlchHI Lan· dlln. lo Morrow. \ 11:00 O "Om1la'1 D111rftter" (honor) '~ r.10111 Holden "WerfWOlf et lendofl" (horror) 'JS -Henry Hull 12.JO m "lru-"'a !flt S.Uftd larritf" I (ac!vtnlure> '52-Mn Todd. Aatph Rirhud<on l :JO fJ (C) "lelfftd lnhdtl" C~r•m•J ·s~rtto'Y p,,_ ll•IM\oh Ktrr. I C:OO 0 (C) ''Tht C.shlitn" (1i!vtnlur1) ''3-Cu~r R11mtro f r1nk1t Aottlon lO:tO 0 (Cl ''Tiit y,.,. r.0111 1'0111111(1 Mta4" (drama) 5~ A.chard (Jan, 4:30 9 •111.0 " Mf DMt" (d11m1) O.na Wynter. I 'C~umpl11ey Bo1ert. Jolin Derek. SHARP 1 It yn'11 • 1h1rp l•acltf', ••• "" DAILY flllOT'S f•mnv• o;.,. •• A·llMl cla,.,f,tcl 11h Sat.mlay" M1\e t bt"tt clt•I w~ether f•1t're ~V'J'"' Df u fllft,, NEW YORK (AP)-lt may have escaped general nolice, but Monday night's "Rowan and Martin Laugh-in" on NBC was a little shorter than usual. NETWORK executives had snipped out about 3 ~ minutes ·from he tape -a couple o1ga-gs antt- a comedy sketch. Between the lime the show was shot and the time it was broadcast, they had ceased to be funny. The excised skit had impressioni st John Byner playing King George IV but speaking in an unmis· takable Texas accent about "the colonies," in ob- vious reference to Vietnam. One of the omitted lines had comedian Flip Wilson making a joke re- ferring to racial differences. THE PROGRAM was made three or four weeks ago. before President Johnson announced he wouJd not ·seek re·election. before Hanoi responded to peace overtures and before the assassination of Dr. Marlin Luther King .J r. "The program had the approval of our conlin· uity acceptance people." said a network executive. '·The omissions were made in the light of events in the name of good taste." ACT ION had been taken quickly too about Sun- day night's "Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour" on CBS. A year-old Easter program was substituted for the scheduled show because the latter -a rerun of a more recent program -contained a sketch with pointed. satiric racial references lhat under the circumstances would not have been funny. This has been a season when topical comment, often tart and sometimes bitter. has attracted spec- ial attention to some variety programs. The onrush- ing events of the past nine days have not only demonstrated the extreme fragility of topical hum- or but caused some network executives to wonder if it is wise to use much or it. ONE HIGH executive predicted that lhere would certainly be some ··serious rethinking" about the free-wheeling gags that have enlivened some proj:!rams .<\nd startled some viewers. DPntt:is thP Me1aace '&Ji, 'JOO GOT lME MOST UNINTll/ISTIN' TO'/ eox r e~ SAW!· SERVING THE Public and Tr-ade COMPLETE PRrNTING SERvtCE =4iii·'''"'"'IGi-,42.432l Newport IHcfl t \ .. _t_a DAl_l Y_Pl_LO_T _______ T_UfSdiy, April '>. 1'68 ~Angels to Open in Unfriendly Yankee Stadium Hard-luck Brunet vs NY's Angel-kil'ler CHERUBS' CHOICE George Brunet B1 GLENN WHITE Of Ille O.llY "9t Sltlt NEW YORK -Southpaw Geor&e • Brunet and Angel-killer Mel Stot· Uemyre are slated to take the mound Wednesday afternoon at legendary Yankee Stadium as the Yanks and Cherubs at last get their trouble-rid· dled American League opener into the archives. Originally they were menaced by threat of a stadium strike. However. that obstacle was erased Friday. Then the assesmnation and burial or Dr. Martin Lutlle'r King forced postponement of Tuesday's scheduled inaugural at the House That Ruth Built. B l l l Ripy's c h a p s from Orange County are facing a couple of bugaboos Wednesday when bostUltles finally get under w&y. By Rigney's admission. Yankee Stadium has nevt-r l>P.en a· producer of many victories fo1 the Cherubs. They were U here last year against a team which was only one step out of the junior clrcult basement. Jn seven years they have copped only 2n of 63 struggles in the famous s~ture. And Stottlemyre has beerr\ough on hls California opponents. showing an 8- 3 llfetlme record against them. Brunet has not fared nearly as well In outings against the once-proud Bronx Bombers. His slate reveals a 4. 8 mark. The 32-year-old Brunet has been labled "hard·luck" George by those familiar with bJs misfortunes in 1967. T AKIN' A BREAK -Billy Casper and his caddy steal a moment of relaxation during Monday"s gruelling 36-hole wrapup lo t.be Greater Greens- Ul'I T--- boro Open. The rest didn't hurt Casper. as he fin~bed 17 under par at 267 to win the fat Casper Isn't Satisfied- Eyes Maste1~s . GREENSBORO. N.C IAPl -Billy ' Casper's golf credentials are highly impressive, but he stiU has one more pa.I be yearns to attain -hi!I first ••¥asters championship. '!· When the 36-year-old CalUornfan '/ttw out Of Greensboro Monday nlght he wa s $27.500 richer after winning the '137 .500 Greater Greensboro Open with a record~ualllng 'Jlil. A double round was played Monday because of t"o earlier postponements. · Today he beJ?an practice for that elusive Masters championship, con· fident that "I'm going into the Masters Thursday with the best chance I've ever had." Despite a layoff of almosl two months while he visited U.S. forces in ft\e Far East. Casper returned to com· petition hen~ with a remarkable dikptay of consistent golf. His scores were ~~. a 17-under par performa,ce over the 7,034-yard Sediefleld Country 'Club course. $27,500 winner's purse. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- Buldch Calls Signal Chicago Bears' Hull Slated for 'Transl er' Mike Hull. hallback OD USC'1 19''1 national cltamplouldp f • o 1 b a l l 1quad, Is due for a 1wftcb of po1ltio1 when he joint the Chicago Bears next 1ta1on. Bear quarterback Rudy Buklch co nndu tbat Mlke wlll be switched to tlt ht tnd for lM Wind y City out· flt. mainly because of hl1 11no1uall~· Hoe blocking ability. Baklcll, a NeW'p(lrt Beach resl· •llllllNlllll• WHITE WASH 1111111111111• de1t, 11 llOt commenting when asked how motll loaS•r lle'U 1tkk with &hf> '""· other Ulaa te py, "u lone as tlley keep me arMIHI, I PH•·" lat.era! movement required of a back or he'd probably be carrying the ball -tr {:( tr Orange Countians seeklng SPolll on the 1968 Stanford varsity football production lncluM Bob Heffern an (/\later Del). navt-T 1 et gt (Anaheim ) and Phil \Its 1 tr ( S4-rvlte). Ttetge Is a 168-pound I.Jack whllt lettermen (219) and Messer (%21) Uaemen. gopbomort Heffernan are selllor Stanford coach John Rallto• has anotber pally achedule lined up and perhaps thls year he can come up with a winning season. Uhl lndlan1 meet such feeble foes aa San Jotf' S'8t.e. Unlvenity of Paclfk. Oregon. Air For ct . Wa!'hlntlon State and Cal. UCI's Bob Wilhite was shooting for honors in the 3-meter djve today aa the country's leading performers dueled at the NaUonal AAU charripions in Greenville. N.C. Although be owned a nilly 2.64 earn· ed run averaee for the last half of the sea1411, he bad only an 11·19 record to In one ml<ldenlng stretch of four games he yielded only three run;, had a string of 28 straight scoreleaa iJ:I.. nlngs. Yet be bad only an 0-1 record to A119el'• Slate AorU t ......... ~ Yetll IO:lS It;· IC.Ml'~ 17~/j 10 A"911t e New Ywtl 1 :S t .11\ AMII 11 AMcl1 et Ctnttend 11:11 a,11'1. kMl'C 1710! show for the period. After bagging last year's opener with Detroit, he went on to lose nine consecutive verdicts before agaln den· ting the win column. Ha mates could produce onJy 11 runs during the famine. The Yanks and Angels finished the exhlbltlon campaign with nearly Iden· tical records. New York was involved In a three-way Ut for fow1J:I place, owning an 11-12 record. The IUgneymen wound up third, 1'" 12 on the Cactua session. Wednelday'a show, whJch flaures to attract only 16,000 to tbe Bronx, ls the first stop of a whirlwind road swine thought the east. Thursday the Angell play in huge Municipal Stadium in Cleveland. They rest on Good Friday, then play at Baltimore Saturday and Sunday. Road competltion proved to be the Cherubs' downfall i.o 'rtl as they flnlah- ed only ~ games out of first place. Tbey were able \.0 win only 31 of 78 tilts on foreign soil. YANKEE WHIZ Mel Stottlemyr• Dodgers Concede to Phils Three Inaugurals in Doubt By ASSOCIATED PRESS 'nle 1968 major league baseball leUon now I s scheduled to open Wednesday wittlout a forfeit or a strike. But three of the 10 games re· mained up in the air because of the racial anrett In W a a b i n g t o n , Baltimore and•Detroit. • The traditional Presidential opener at D.C. Stadium, postponed from Mon· day to mourn slain civil right& leader Dr. Martin Luther Kjng Jr., still was u arNattoifir'GUar'Qfroop:s oc- cupied the stadium. The soldiers had been called out to restore order in the troubled city. Civil disorder in Baltimc.-e the last three days brought out troop• and the same held true in Detroit where Mlchigan Governor George Romney has instituted a state of emergen<:y. Sports in Brief Minnesota is schedulee1 to open in Washingtoo, Oakland at Baltimore and Boeton at Detroit. However. the cloud of doubt over two other openers was lifted Monday when Los Angeles agreed to set braek tonight's scheduled game to Wed· Dofl9er Slate they would play , which would have meant the first major league forfeit since 1954, but decided Monday to postpone ttle game. In New York, groundskeei>ers and maintenance p e r s o n n e 1 voted unanimously Monday to a~e~ new contracts with Ya.nkee and Shea A.>rll f Oocl-vs Pt\lledtl""'-If·"'· IC" f ... l ' ~· 10 DodMn "' l'lll1-""1a o.m. teF t'4tl stadiums and returned to work im· Aorll lJ vt NN Yor• I P.m. ICFt !MDI ' ... .._ vor11 1 '·"'· teF1 ui ediat 1 llt '1!'~'t I o-:. rn jUll m e y. u. ....... ,. ~--·-'nfl!"nst-of-ttrcWed~-- oeaday and a threatened strike by are ClevelanC: at Chicago in the New York Stadiurr. warters was American League and Atlanta at St. cancelled. Lo · th M t t S Fr · The Philadelphia Pllillies, who open Pittswabur, ghe eH .~ •• 8_ adnth ~cisco, against the Dodgen, said they would at OWKVU an e "'-Ucago forleit·the game rather than play to-Cubs at Cincinnati in the Naticoal day, the day Dr. King was to be burled League. In Atlanta. The Dodgers at first said Boston Reconsidering; Might Boycott Olympics LOS ANGELES-Ralph Boston, the world record holder in the long fimp, &ays he is reconsidering his d~n not to boycott the Olympic Games in Mexico City. Last December when a group of Negroes announced they would boycott t:l'le Games In October, Boston bad 93.id, "It doe1ln't make any sense. I don't feel the games should be used as a political crutch and I don't think politics should enter the Olympic Games at all." But Boston said Monday the death of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. may convince him to change hls mind. "I want to represent tbt Negro." Boston said. "J want to represent my race but what I don't want to represent are people like the man who killed Martin Luther King." "Everybody gave him a hare'. time when he was alive," Boston said Of Dr. l(jng. "NO-W they say he was a great man and a great American . They're eulogizing him all over. Where were those phonies when the man was doing what he believed In?" Boston leaped 'l7 ieet. H't inches May 29, 196.'>. for a world record that still stands. He was second in the 19&4 Olympics in Tokyo. to Lynn Davies of England. .... .... .... ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS -Tbe Mluesota Tw1na plattd plttber Jim Kaat on the dJsabied ll1t for 21 days Moaday. Clnb PruldeDt Calvh GHf· ftth said he was opUmllt1c that die big left.bucle-r wonJcl Uc.k Ms arm troable. Kaat tbrew "me la1t Tintnclay fdiht ud agala Mooday after U "' derrot•c x-ray treatmeat. a week earlier. Kaat said Ma alliaS left elbow felt lmpnved ud Griffith co.Ormed that Kaat bad woaderecl If be mtpt not be retained oa the 1dt~Jl1t. .... .... ~ NEW YORK -Earl MollJ'oe of Baltimore is the only unanimous choice on this sea.son's National Basketball Association AU-Rookie team announced today. Monroe received a vote from each of the league's 12 coaches. Bob Role Of Seattle and Walt Frazier of New York got 11 votes apiece. Rounding out the team were Al Tucker of Seattle and Phil Jackson of New York with eight votes each. .-.... .- DAU.AS -DaUaa and New Orleans reaume tbelr American Basketball Auoclatfon playoff tonight and the Chaparrals have found their ~me town a moat fortunate spot. The Buccaneers are one-up, having won 104-99 at New OrJean1 Friday night In the opener of the be.Wf-7 .... .... .... CHJCAGO -Sam Williams of Iowa was announced Monday as the Big Ten's most valuable basketball player. Williams, who set three scoring records for the Hawkeyes with 632 points in one sea.son, including 219 field goals and 194 Cree throws, edged Ohio State's BUI Hosket in a close race. ............ LOS ANGELES -The Unlvenlty of HodlJton la ameng foar new opp0ne1t1 U1ted 01 USC's 1MMl9 baaketbaO 1cbedule, releaaed today. Tbe Troja111 will play Houlton on December 7 at th Sport. Arena. Otlter aew foes are Bl1gbm Youn( (Nov. 31), Cblcluatl (Dee. 11) a 11 d Vuderbllt (Dee. %3.) U.S. DAVIS TEAM SLATES lST MATCH RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -Donald Dell. captain of the U n i t e d States Davis Cup tennis tMm, said Monday the tum will play Ila fint match in the American Zone here May 3-5 against the British West Indies. Dell aa.id UM team would include Arthur Ashe of RJchmood; Clark Graebner of New York Oty; Charles Pasarell of Puerto Rico: Stan Smith of Puadena, Calif. and Bob Lots or Los Anceles. Dennis Ralston was named coach of the Davis Cup team. Dell said. Kings Move For Knockout Of Minnesota ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (A P) - The Los Angeles l(jngs move i.n for the kill in their National Hockey League West Division semifinal playoff series tonight. But Minnesota North Stars' Coach Wren Blair says the victims may be uncooperative. The Kings bounced the North Stars 2-1 and 2-0 last Thursday and Saturday in Los Angeles to take a commanding 2-0 lead in the best-of-I Stanley Cup series. And one more Los Angeles vie· tory here would just about take all hope away from Minnesota. Jn other Stanley Cup playoff action tonight. Montreal (2-0) Is at Boston and Chlcago visits New York (1-0). "We've got a club that's been boun4 cing back all year.'' Blair aaid. "And I don't think we're ready to die yet. We have a good record against LA, 6'.-2-2 during ttle regular season. "Our goe.l now is to win our two home games, and then go from there. If ttre team plays the way it can, It cert.ainly can turn tbe tables on them." Blair beld a team meeting and tnen met with each of his players in- dividually Monday. Tbe North Stara called up wings Leo Thltlault. 23. and Andre Pronovost, from the Memphi.t South Stan of the t.:entral Hock!y Leape Moaday. BWr said one of Che tw'O would au.tt up tonight. ., The fourth pme "tbe serie4 will be here Thursday nlatrt. After Monday's first 18 holes he and bon January were tied for the lead at 311. C&sper had come baclt after dropl ping three shols behind January. who 1trung together five birdlet on t\ls first nine. then ran Into bogey trouble. After 10 holes ln the afternoon Casper had only a one shot lead. with Ctorge Art:her, January and Gene Lit· t"'" on hls bffls. B•tkll WU QB ea the Trojall 1qaad tlaat edsed Wilcoa1ln. 7.f. In the 1951 a.. Bowl claall. Rady threw the pu1 whl,ell prochlced tltf Ult'• lftt ICOfe. AJ Carmichael ,.. .. ~ rtttlnT. Opening Day Hurler Has a Rifle ~ , tr {:( Tourinl the circuit: Newport Harbor HI~ football coach Vecle Witu Sf")'S 1'e I qolng-bat'k to tbt T.formalliii Ii 1988'.-Ht..-cot • couple of IDp quarterback candldataa to dlrec:t ~ auact ID BW Sbedd nd Bob CUqy. Watts calla Curry "the toughest kid around," and feets the Tars will have a JUCCeaatuJ uuon ln the roug1' aJk1 tumble SUNe1 Leuue AacbortnJ the Sallor line Is Stu Aldrich, a fitbt eod with tM alu of a pro and tbe speed of a tractman. Untortunatel1 ht doet not have the , . ,.. - WASHINGTON 1AP) -This year tne openin1 day pitcMt' wore an olive uniform. -,etf' •So~ Rkbert WM hurl- inf-bUeball'• treclitional PresJdentiaJ opeaer for the WublDltf>o StlifOn. MOndat. oe whit wu to Uvt bl!en openln, day 19111 'Pfc. Riehm stood in the aame 1t.dlum, clad in combat dras. w1tb a rttle on his shoulder . "It t•IJ very odd ... said CM YOIIDl{ aouthpaw. one ot more than 11.<nl trooP1 nnt to Washinstoo to quell ~ arson and looting that rocked the na- tion'a capital for three niC)lts. On.I)' bett1e-1arbed aoldier1 occupied • t ....... . ----..-..,...-... .. ~ .... •• Las esta Amt iten bis · of tJ wer nan· his ti tis ti ton mot will ver: as 1 ing exc sen: t.be it a 9' •• hi "' fl a tt "' b • tf k • • ros cin ODE He me ag; MI pa: Sa.J th• la!! ha· ba tin tw ---- - ·. '• . ' .. ~.-. ' •, .. • •f '• ·.~ -· •• •:.A.,.._••• 4 . . , ....... ,,.... •.. , ' ' .,.. . , . .., '' . ... .. ' BUD TIJCKER PALM. SPRINGS -Jlmmy (The Greek) Snyder. Las Vegu, esteemed maker of odds, has seen fit to establish the Detroit Tigers as favorites to win the 1968 American League pennant. Probably the most significant thing about th.is little item of intelligence is that the Greek shows the back of bis neck to the Boston ~ Sox, who are the defenders of the title. Actually, this is not altogether surprising. There were those wbo insisted the Red Sox won the 196? pen- nant with one of the worst collections of bums in the history o! the pastime. What is more, there were sta- tistics to prove it. To the foregoing can be added the fact that Jim tonborg, Boston's most celebrated pitcher. fell off a mountain while skiing and broke a kneecap. Lonborg will miss a good portion of the early season, which does very little to enhance the Red Sox' chances to repeat. So Jimmy the Greek bangs up the Detroit Tigers as the choice on the early line. This is his way of say- ing he is not at all sure about the American League except that one betting on Boston is not showing good sense. What the Greek means is that you can throw out the Red Sox and almost any one of the others can win it all. * * * Bill RigMy, who manages the Callfornla An- gels, would lik~ to have his tum Included in any such train of thought. Ri9My entertains the notion his oafs hav• as good a shot at th• ,,-nnant as tha next bunch. "Why not?" Rigney wants to know. "In the final wffk of the season last yNr, wa went East and knocked two of the contenders right out of the " It will ba recalled that the two contenders were the Minnesota Twins and the Detroit Tigers. Rit- MY Is dead right. The Angels blasted both clubs beyond recall and permitted the Boston tHm to enter by the rear door. In the pool halls of Mlnneapolls and Detroit, th•y art still throwing darts at a likeness of Rigney. "My point Is," Rigney goes on, "that If we can knock those tHms over in the last Wffk of a SH- son, we can play a little batter over the long haul and win everything. "W• wart In the thick of the race most of the way last time and this time wt will have • little h•lp." * * * Examining Rigney's roster, you notice two names important enough to provide the Angels with assistance. They would be Sammy Ellis and Chuck Hinton. Ellis will be recalled as the young man who once rose to extravagant hei~hts as a pitcher for the Cin- cinnati Reds and won 22 games over the duration of one summer. Hinton is an outfielder from the Cleveland Indians. He has not yet bad the summer wherein he rises above mediocrity. Chub Feeney, the general manager of the San Fran- cisco Giants, came through Palm Springs the other day on his way to his team's en~mpment at Phoe~x. Posing as an expert on the National League and its people. Feeney bad a word or two to utter about Sam- my Ellis. Feeney came flat out and said, "Ellis will never again win 21 games." "Is that so?" says Rigney. ''Well, I have news for Mr. Feeney. He bas been wrong once or twice in the past." Feeney, of course. is entitled to his opinion. By the same token, Rigney is entitled to bis hopes. "This game is full of ifs," Rigney says. "I know that as well as the next guy. If we play like we did last year and if we get help from Ellis and Hinton, we have a shot at it. "All I'm saying is that when you list the clubs that have a chance. you have to include our litUe team." Why not? Rigney bas a reputation of always put- ting nine guys on the field who can walk. The Red Sox won everything last year with only two. --- I auen I've taken as m1ny chances on ttit golf course as 1ny man. It 1ust isn't my n1ture to play 1t safe. 1. However, there ire times when even I ind it necessary to eurcise better jud1mant and take ''th• lon1 way home." The illustration shows on• "uch occas)on. Here I'm chlppin1 out Into the falr- w1y ... ~1iflcln1 a 1trolct, r1lheffl'ian to-rtrt'-•n VftT plly11btl fie In th• busM .. and tr .. a betwillnnl and ttlt """· ~ Golf1r1 would be wfse to t.rnper the r spirit of adventure. on oaas1orJ, •nd settle for tn tny bopy. Ont rot• of thumb I auaut moat toUtrs follow la never to 1tt1mpr a shot that they h•ven't prlC· tleed, or 1t IHst pulled off once, il'I th• p11t. Don't ruin 1 •hole d1y on the 1olf courH with one risky shot. -I-All • e ,,. Ml'\. ,.,_ ....... Saving a Goal DAILY ,llOT J9 Hanley's 5 RBl's Pace Tars; Lions Fall Into Consolation By ROGER CARLSON Of .. Otlly l'llllt ..... Newport Harbor's varsity baseball aqusid continued in Ute championship bracket today wltb a contest against Savanna at Santa A n a Valley High in the Sa.nta Ana Elks Tournament. W e stmlnster. bowevef. took on Foothill in a con· solatioo bracket contest at Saddleback. Newport's Tari a I a u g h t e r e d Rancho Alamitos. 16·2. Mooday at Santa Ana Valley to gain the championship bracket. But Sadd1eback threw 11 singles • t Westminster. Monday, to take a M verdict over the Sunset power. Other tournament scores: Katella 11, Foothill 6 ; Savanna 9, Santa Ana Valley 5; Loa.ra S. Villa Park 1; Sunny Hills 7, Orange o. Garden Grove 6. Santa Ana 2; Anaheim 5. Kennedy 2. Ken Hanley was the big scoring gun ror Newport with two for three at the plate. including a home run and a double, scorin1 three times and knocking in five runs. The first two batters in the game proved to be a hint of things to come. as Steve Hanley opened up with a single and brother Ken homered for the Tars• first two runs. After that it just kept pil- ing up with two more in the fourth and then an eight.run fifth inning. Newport racked up a tri· ple. double and four singles during that frame. Scott Longnecker's single with the bases loaded got two runs home and later Ken Hanley doubled two more home. Bob Leavy tripled still later to cap the innfog for coach Andy Smith's nine. Steve Cavanaugh was the winning pitcher. Westminster wasn't qwte so fortunate as host Sc;d- dleback scored four times 1n Aviation's 3-run Rallv • Edges Huntington, 6-5 INGLEWOOD -Hun- tington Beach Higb's Oilers fell victim to a three-run ~OA-£ally io. the bottom of the seventh inning, drop- ping a 6-5 decision in the first round of the Hawthorne J n v I l a t i o n a 1 Bascbc;U Tournament. hits in the first rive innings be fore .tirift a rttl giving way in the sixth inning :wben Aviation got ils first three runs. ~e llv IAlll,.., Hunlln9•on on 000 1-S 5 0 Avtellon ooo OOJ ~ 9 o 14ul!ll"•'•" m the fourth Inning 8lld mado it bold up. 'Ille Roadrunners p u t together four singlft, a walk and an error for the big in· ning. W e a t m l oster's IJont countered with 10 hlts, in· eluding four doubles, but It wasn't enough. The l.Jona got two ln the sixth inning to pull within two and had a J1ll1J>er on se· cood with one out. However, two fly outs and a peaceful seventh iming ended it. • " e N-1 2Gt "3 1-1' 14 ) Rtlldlo At.ml19t too 002 0-2 l i ~''" $. Hanlev. H I(, H1n1ty, If luvy, lb Wunko, u Strubble, u CHtr•, c1 T rovono. ci Cavanauoti. o war .... r. ph Bean. o 811c.k. lb M1l11>0lf, pl\ l.o"lntchr. 111 Holmn, 2b Currv. c Mortin. c Ooteabout, ph W•bfter, rt Tote II Al ll H H f l 2 , 1 l 2 , s s ' 3 1 ' • • 0 I 0 1 0 ' 1 ' 0 2 O I I 1 I 1 0 1 I 1 o 0 • • 0 l ' 0 0 ' 0 0 0 ) t I , , 0 0 0 l , , t t 1 • 0 ' 0 • 0 I 1 1 0 31 16 1• It ••MM Alemlm (21 ErneNon, c1 Ntbotl. c Jemn."" RHWI, C l>avb, rt Ptlrldl, If Ken ... p vou.,., p Olllt!Tlacl\er, lb KtlleY. lb Raot11. 211 81rnes. u Ovluo, o GraY. pn ~· ~ ~'I~ ~ ~ : : ' 0 • • 2 1 ' 0 4 0 2 ' 2 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 • 0 2 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 l 0 , 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 0 0 8~ ---=,.~ .... ,--''!---....._ ____ _ a M L S..ddleback 002 a -II t Wttlmlnsltr 010 012 -lO t Wulml111ter 141 u It " ... 3 0 I • 3 0 , 1 1 0 0 0 Lynwood's goalie leaps through the air to make a key save in Sunday's 2-2 lie with the Coast Rangers in Pacific Soccer League battle at Newport Beach's Mariners Park. Seen for the white-clad Rangers are Jerry Dawson (left), Colin West and Hans Weyer (right}. West got both goals for bis eleven. The game. played al Inglewood High, was turned around by Aviation's out· burst in the seventh lo t.1ke away apparent victory from the Oilers. ~lberl. It Snvder. 2b Wlck1rsn.1T1, lb Roli.t, lb Hermon, lb O•vtMOrt, rl C•m1>bell, rt Rull, c1 Flovd, c1 a uti.r. c 8trv, "· Al." 1111 4 0 0 0 7 I o o l 1 3 I l 0 I 1 0 0 0 0 O I O 0 , 0 0 0 , t 1 0 I 0 0 0 ) 0 0 1 ) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 s s ' Maveda, u Grant. cf BIM. ci Ho0tn. lb Ntuman, lb W McCtrl....,, " Weller, c &Ill•, p McOoMld, o Jennl119s, rt P McCartMy. rf Keller. 711 Dedrick. ?I> Russell, lb Hay,.., lb l 0 0 • 1 0 • 0 3 • 1 0 • , , 0 I 0 t t , I 1 0 , 0 1 ' 0 • • • CrlsP. P Hof'vaf, D C1n1,..11. p 1 • • 0 , 0 • 0 , ' 1 2 Boes, GWC Mesa Showing Good In Tourney In Swim Invitational Huntington was bcx:k to· day to battle Inglewood High at 11 :30 and followed with a battle with El Segun· do at 2 p.m. Oiler Bob Wickersham singled. d o u b 1 e d and homered in a losing cause. It was his second circuit smash in a week . Totals Hvett, If l euc, c Klm~r. SS Moouln. 3b Moor•, rl Ancler..,n. ci Wl'th>llll. lb &un<n. lb C4udtl. P l(ll'dtll. p bltllfll ~·' Al It " lttl 4 0 I 0 • , I 0 ' , 2 , 2 1 I l , 0 0 0 4 0 , 1 3 0 ' 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 1 I O ,. • ' ! ' 0 1 • Tot1t1 30 ' 10 ' S ... llMdt (6) R. Sllvu. u l Sllvu . 7b Hor.ms, lll Warl"fl\, If Kell, lb Gomel. ci G-trcla, rt Sutton, c Bt-nton, P Al It H Ill 4 l 1 II ' 0 I 1 l • 1 • 4 I 1 l 4 ' • 0 ' 1 l 1 l I 1 1 l I 1 1 Orange Coast and G<>lden West travel lo Blair Field in Long Beach Wednesday to open up the Casey Stengel · Cerritos Baseball Tourna- ment. Golden West plays Long Beach City College at 10:30 with Randy Vmaha slated to pitch for the Rustlers. Vataha is coming oU a 4-2 victory over Ante lope Valley in the recent Azusa tourney -his first start or the year. Orange Coast will wait un· til 2:3(' before tackling Los Angeles Harbor. Gary Dunkelberger I s slated for mound duties for the PirMes in the opener. The Pirates spUt two games last year in the "tourney with a win over Rio Hondo {3-2) and a loss against San Diego Mesa ( ..._ 1). Other top nines in tbe junior college tournament are Mt. San Antonio. Long Beach, Cerritos, Rfo Hondo, L.A. Harbor, G 1 end a le . Coalinga and H a n ·c o c k among others. SW IM CLASS ORGANIZED Special swlrf\ classes, designed to i n s l r u c t children from ages nine months to three years. are being organized by former USC assistant swim coach Larry Delotta. Clas.es will be taught c o mpetiUve swimming •nd a special team, to be caJh!d the Ne" rOrt Beach Swim Club. will b e organized. All cl&sses are Umlted to small groups and are usualty held three times a week. Private and semi- private sessions can be scheduled to •ult the stu· dent. To enroll. call M4-0050 Fountain Valley's tirst an- nual invHational swim meet will come to a close Thurs- day with the championship /ace cloudy after prelims Monday afternoon. Cost.a Mesa High st.ands a good chance al winning the varsity division as the Mustangs go into the finals wrth seven individuals 800 a 400 free relay team. I Host Fountain Valley has\ two swimmers goiJ>g in dif- ferent events for jts lot.al oulput in varsrty. Top individual th.rough the prelims is Burroughs' Al Pi.n5on, Who splashed to wins In the 50 and 100 free. Pinson won the 50 in 23.1 and then came back later to nail the 100 In an excellent 49.8. Mesa's Dave Whitaker was serond in both events. Other big guns for Costa Mesa were Bob Moseley and Chris Gammon. Mosele7 had the best times In t:M 200 free and the 400 free. His 200 time ol 2:00.7 mat- ched Frank Pascoe of Foun- tain Valley who 13 se~ed second in the finals. A 4:26.7 was good enough for ttie best time in tbe 400. Gammon took top hon ors in the 100 fly with a 57 7 - some two run seconds less tnan bis best mark of the year. Fountain Valley's Pai;c-oe on the 100 back with a t :06.1 while Harry Noah grabbed two spots In the finals. Noah placed fourth in the 200 individual med~y and nabbed a third in the 400 free. Burroughs. P a c I f i c a . Valencia and Western ap- pear to be the ones to hurdle if Costa Mesa ls going to win It all. The lightweights are a t.ossup. No area swimmer fini~hed first in either the Bee or Cee events. v-.... 700 FrM -l. -!Pt (CM) l"O'l I 1 Puce. (f'Vl 1·02.7. JI ,,... -1. Wllllek<W' ICM\ I> I • ltOY (C:M) '4 1 JOO locllv~ _...... -' llNI! (FV) ,.lS 6 For Coast Area Swim Honor Roll- Ylllf//ff "' l'Mflf¥ • ...., -\, C.0-.. /IMr 1.11.) 1 Etfllftde l ,,. I ~····· ~-l '°'~ (C.MI ltG.I 2 $VIWtt' fCdMI 1.IU 1 WMl-ICMl t.W O'Ft trtO CMtrl l!IU JI HM -l -l•l!tf ICM! 111 t '*"°~ llN•l >l t t Alltl< .. 111 (UN\) ,, '· M 1.WMMI llW!d'-¥ -l c._ (C~l t t1.J t_ L~ (MM) t.•61 W11Cft (NI l.1U t• ""' -1. 0--ICMI U.t J • ._ .. on•• a. c... 1c.1114. ' -............. ---· 100 Flv -1 Ga!Tlmon (CM! S7 7 Tollll 3 ' ' ' 32 f 11 ' Tota\1 100 Fret -1 Whlta•er (CM) U.3 S, ltov (CM) 55,0. 100 leek -1 Pueot (FV) 1 •W.1. 400 Fret -1. MoitleY ICM! 4:7U J. Wickersham's ho m e r carrie in the seventh inning ---------------------- Noah (FV) 4:.,,0 400 FrM Rel<lv -7 Cent• Meta 3.36 I S Fount~ln Valley J:SJ 6 ·-JOO Mtdln' Relev -( Ccnl• M.w I ff I 7. Fountllln Valley 1 GS I. 700 Fr• -7. Mltltnber9 (CM) 2:00. 4, Miiiet' (CM) 7:07.S. SO Free -\ $1\md IFVI 7. VIie ICM) 7H. ' 100 Ftv -5. Hill (CM) 1-1)"2. loo Free -6. Stuard IFV) S7.5. 100 &adl -$. Ml1lolek (CM) I :07.3 6. 01vl1 (FV) 1:07.,, * F!'M - 7. Miiier ICMl ·M11. 100 lreast -5. 5-avle ICMI 1:17 1. * Free lteler -l. Cott• Mes. i.s.u. ,_ 200 ~ley Rtl•Y -l . Fountain Vtlley 1:01.1 200 Frtt -2. Ptvmlff ICMI 7:0S l S. &IMOft ICMl 2:07.6. SO Frtt -2. Hood IFVI 4 Scn-ICM) 26,I. 100 lnclJvldu.I Mtdle'I' -6. W1rsler IFV) l:OU. 100 Free -S. Sd!Mn,,,.,hl (CM! St 1. .IO aac:k -J. Plumlee (CM) lO ' s. Wanlfl' !FYI J0.6, 200 Fr• lttlav -3, Colle MHI 1:4.5.S. Mesa Ve .. de Hosts Coast Swim Stars The Mesa Verde Country Club swim team will host the first annual Coastal C h ampionship sw1rnming meet at the Mesa Verde Country Club on Saturday. Starting time is 9 a.m. Ribbons will be awarded to the Hrst six pla ces with a trophy given to the club with the overall high score. Teams from the coast area competing are: Balboa Bay Club. Blue Dolphin Swim Team. Coast Clippers. Corona del Mar Swim Te am. Huntington Beach Swim Clu b. Mesa V e r d e Country Club. Newport Beach Tennis Club, SE.ln Clemente Swim Team. All 16 members of the Mesa Verde Swim Team contributed points to t.he overall 84 chalked up at the Buena Part Splashers se· cond a n n u a I Invitational l'Wlm meet April 6 Mesa Verde finished nfth with the bases empty, giving the Sunset Leaguers a 5·3 lead. But. the Falcon's came back with four singles and a walk to win it. Huntington still led 5-4 with two out and the bases full, but a wild pitch and a single to left field ended it. .{erry Horvat was the los· ing pitcher, coming on in the sixth inning to bail out Bill Crisp. Crisp gave up only two Area Aces Mav Join el All-Stars Five Orange Coast area basketball seniors are · , line to participate in a prep all~tar basketball game at the Forum in Inglewood, Ju· ly 10. Those approached a r e Mark Soderberg and Bill Moore or Marina, Greg ,,. Snyder or Huntington Beach. ,,.'' John Yule and Phil Jordan 1 of Corona del Mar. 1 The game will mE<ch the I top seniors from the CIF l AAA basketball f o r c e s I against the best graduates : Los Angeles City Schools 1 have to offer. I• Those who make the 12· t man squad will have a full· \ scale practice Mtiy 1. '"'>-..... ,,,.,. -c· Blil Armstrong. coach of / . ' ClF champion C-0mpton, will / ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••• \ lco~~~e~h s,ee:~~~fd~ permit on· I : t~. • ~. ~. ~ .~ .~. ~ M • • ~.T. ~ Q '.IJ .M y one p ayer rom any one school lo participate with OPENING HOME STAND STARTS APRIL 17 the exception . of the l2U1 NEW YORK YANKEES player. who will be chosen by t~ head coach as a wild BALTIMORE ORIOLES card. WASHINGTON SENATORS OAKLAND ATHLETICS GET YOUR TICKETS NOWI In a field of 36 teams with TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE AT THESE OFFICES IN YOUR AREAs \ Pam Scbweltur leading thE' _....,. rt1.1m• '°""'a.a way with a first ln the. 50 ....,.. l'llttt & Uft61111111 Sllmr'1 M1111t ,._ "'""*' ~ ,._ meter freest vie in 48.0. l!IO llD. AMM• ™· m lie. MM'« 11¥4.. m lie.""""''""' ~ llorelref Alf~11ft IAHm tlM ~ 1116-1 ... Metl "-;:' :.~ WI--. AlltOlltlic.. llo. NW. .IWCl*tn'1 fllvllc 4%2t lll'dl .. i ....... "" -J. ,...,, Sdlwtl'-lllU .,. c.Nte --ll¥t = I: .7. ,, Kt11¥ llcmrt11 1:10 ~lVillWl 1111111 .... •ACa "'"""'"'* l'NlfW llt,l!t\I • •t ~It-1237 Wetl CMlnl M . l>Mt• Altdtft C.. JO TOll'll I ~ •nu. 1. 1Ct11¥ .o;.11{11Tn ..., -~ ~eaar ....,....,.,...., • nwtw bedt -I. '°Ml ~ .......... '1111'1.....,. ...._. ....... .... .... Cl!lr 2109 '9-~ l;tU. I k911'f ~ 1 ... ~ ,. • ... 6 M. ff C11t lln t;,::.:r' *'1 ... Olllll......., Ml a-:. • - --I. l"t!ft lelftoe"'9r Pll • '-t M. ff t.it ..... • . ... C:.. &A -1111M tfl la ... " ..... ~'" . ----c::z:::r I """',........ ... ....... 1'iilelliiii '°' ... ., • ,..., ... -.. °'9 ..,,_ -~~~ ::::11 •e.. :~-:.-:... .... ) "''" Q"l'T.., """-n» llr1ltlf It. JM~ Tlw ~ .. ---.... • ...., fNo ~ tT.,, ICl'lltllff o_e, Ott~ ~I,..,.,., Mfll!Clt lifllwdl C.,. 1101~ LI .... IW. rn--· • INtt!-"'"'~ :,'~ ldlwtltter COSTA MaA '°" aMtM ANO M.l UHrTtD CAUfORHTA BANK BfWfCHES IN ORNteE---ctum "'1• 11-11 ~ ,£~.:.:,~::~ cL.iPanci5A"VE-fAfSAOFORF'UTUR'E~ .. """' ff¥ -• lt<!WI Wati.19f NIWHlTU ... PAI J COUISI '" M~... I e ':. ,.,-., Md! -' 1t011tn w....... ..._, . ...,.." •---6..11.-.,.w"""" a1 ----------------------~--- ----=-----I DAJ\.Y PILOT 'Liglatnlng' Strikes ~ndr~ Ev3.!ls lashes out at Ralph Af pell as a stunned Ron McCor.rmon look!'! on ma cltmact1c scene fror:n the ongina d~ama "Suntn'!er Lightning," opening Fri- day at the new Weslrrunster Community Theater m the Westminster Center (or a three-weekend run. Hit~h!) Cited Will Get Thalbe rg Award By 801 THOMA.I HOU. YWOOD (AP) Lut week Greaory Peck placed a telepboee call to hJ.J one-time director I Alfred Hltcbc:ock. "Hitth," uid ttie actor, wbo la president of ttie Academy of Motion Picture Art.t and Science., "I'm pleued to inform you that the board ot Soven>ora bu vo~ you the Thalberl A wards. We all feel that tJl1J ls sol)'\elbinl that ha. been long overdue." After expreMing b 1 a plieuure with the booor, the di.rector respooded in the typical Hitchcock manner: "You know. Grei. this it tbe son ol thing they itve you Ju.t before you die." te!Md about 1t 1D bit omc. at Uruv....i Chy; "The UU.11 'l"rtuy' aod I hope to bt 1booUDt tt by thla 1ummer. Sboot1J1i 11 ~ euy pvt: Jt la the prepar,,. tlon ~t alway1 la d.lfficult. 1t 11 hard for me to lip writers who will work the way J want them to. "The avera1e w r 1 t er writes •on the DOff,' wb.Ue 1uapeme sbould be written contr'8punta.1Jy. Tbat'1 not becauae suspense J1 fantMy, but becaue lt la truer to life when done with a Ulht touch. "When you m e n t i o n murder, m<>tt writers belin to think in low-key terms, but that'• not the way mur- der uau.ally occurs. The ev- entl leldlDI up to the act it· Mlf milht be Vrj lipt and arnllline. MIO)' JQarderers art ftl')' aetNlctiVt perlClllS; they bave to be in order to attract theJr victlma. U tbey are aft.er ax or money, they must UN their cWmJ to get 1uch thln31." "Fremy" will put Hitch- coeJC b8Ck tn JUa famous senre: the ltory ii based on a real-We EnCUah case in which a mao murdered three women. SCR 'Farewells' Premiere- For Entert.lnmeat . Mary Eastman A 'Headliner' Mary Eastman, folJQder and mana&tnl dlrector of the Orange Studio Theater, ii the Orange CoW1ty Press Club'• Headllntr ot the Ye11 for ent.ert.Jn.ment. Miss E a s t m a n was honored Saturday o l g b t alon1 with leaders ln other ft.elds at th• press club's u- nual Headl.inus banquet at the Santa Ana Elka Club. "She faced b!U'dsblps only the heart of a devoted teacher and the guts of an artist could overcome," tbe pre11s club declared I a presenting her with the coveted award. Making the presen~tlon was B 111 Medley, formerly one of the Righteous Brothers and ~ previous headliner with his ex-partner, Bobby Hatfield. HEADLINER Mary E•ttman Contributing to the headliner award were her headliners which includes critically acclaimed pro-t h e Righteous Brothers, ductions of ''Luv" and Wednesday night, the atill· Uvely Alfred Hitchcock will appear at the Santa Moolca Civic Auditorium to claim his lrvinf G. Tbalberg Awanf ''for consistent high level ol productioDt." The event will make amend• for a long-time oversight. "Medea," along with the South Coast Reper tor Y Re~rto Step musical revue "little man in managioe director David Huston Gets Down to Earth, _W ~nts Low Budget Picture Hitchcock hae b e e n norniJMlted four times for the directorial Oscar - "Rebecca" (1940), "Spell- bound" 09-\5), "Rear w~ doW'' (1964) and "Psycho" c meo1Jwt....u tie IW!tt Theate~. search of hls seriou.s side." Emmes, Melodyland pro- Preaented as the sixth which she adapted and ducers Sammy Lewis and pr tion to S C R ' s directed. Danny Dare and David premiere series at the She also was cHed ror her Tihmar. director of most ___ Newport Beach playhouse. tenacity in building the M lod land rod ti arewells" wu created Orange Studio Theater Crom __ e __ Y ___ P __ uc __ 0_ns_._ "1''1rewell1.1' a o n e • woman show I e a t u r l n c Orance County a c t r e 1 a Margaret Cowles. w·t l l receive Jta world premiere Friday at South Co directed by Dan Stein. obscurity to countywide1o---------- 1or111._.. ..... r of s R renown. Two of her pro--------------..---- . Gy GENE HANDSAKER Huston. 61. for 17 yf'ar'! a low-budget film in th e he has "always been the bridesmaid." Even in 1940, when "Rebecca" w a 1 chosen best picture, the director's award went to .John Ford for "Grapes of Wrath." """ip~ta""ywrt~:;......,.tJ!'s!...~Uru~t.L.c~te~m~i.~s -duetion!:-''L~arwl-!!litt an aaslatant professor of man,., were held 0 v e r drama at UCI. repedtedly last year. HOLLYWOOD (AP l resident of Ireland. wiU film United States?" John Huston disclosed a "A Walk With Love" in the "The unions." Huston novel plan this week. In romantic drama's ~citing. replied. but in an interview these days o< multi million • rrend1 d1ateaus and terrain he softened trus, blaming dollaT budgets he 'II make a he esti!OO'ted would cost $1 :i the Hollywood sy~m. The series of vignettes Miss Eastman joins a lilt depict varied views 0 r or p • s t entert.aimnent movie for. he hopes, less million to reproduce in ''The way pictures are than SI million. Holl ywood. made ~re. the co~. the Honors have come late to Hitchcock. Last month the DirectMs Guild of America gave him tlle cherished D. W. Griffith award for his long list from f l t m ac~evement.s. "l'OT a long time I've been The feminine st.ar, in her overbead1 and the salaries harboring .an ambition to dram"'tJ'c debut. wi'll be "·s of stars make minutes k l .,. iu precious," he said. "It's ma e a pie u.re on a low dark-haired. souH'ul-k>oking budg~t. a . p1.~ture t h a t . daughter Anjelica, 16. For cheaper In Ule loog run to w~sn. tan epic. the Oscar-Huston tihi.t iJ an interesting have huge crews that can wmrung dwect41 told a trade sequel: He directed his late turn the wheel instantly." press luncheon. father. Walter Huston, in Huston llvee with hl.s Tall and craggy raced , "Trell'SUI'e of the Sierra fourth wife, former dancer speaking in the rolling tooes Madre.'' and both won Ricky Soma, and their son of hi6 Noah and voice of the Oscars. and dau~ter in a country The best news about Hitchcock ls that be is once more preparln& a film. He Almighty in his SU-million His crew will number nc manor 1n County Galway. "'.J'M 11 Blble ... in the begin· more than 30. On previous nm~. _ Hlliton told why he Huston pictures. he said, had this wish: there were "at least 75 peo· While directing a simplE' pie on the floor ." 114.'E'lli' of Uie $7-million "Rl.'rlf'rhon-. in a Golden STRt;A;\lLINED V.vr" m lt<ily hr l'OUnlPd 180 c·rrw member~. ·t r u c k nravers. calrrer~. e I c . , ,'\ vi it to a movie set in Sweden conrirmed llis v.i ... h to !'treamline. A com· plicated scene with three ac- tors and camera movemenl had only 12 men be:llind the camera. bcllm<i the camera. liNt:ASY ''This makes a director uneasy. Tbt desire to make the scene good is somehow sha.cled by the desire to get it CinisM<t and Nve another Sl0,000." ''The repose, the quiet wa. something to be en- vied,'' Huston said. , A reporter asked. "What keeps you from making a Crossword Puzzle ACROSS l F'rn1t • Cocky statement 10 Nonstn>el H Cornpelttor 25 Daughter of Eurytus U Clrl's nam t 17 l.llurgical •stmenl 11 , .. ., Kr•lla v" 19 •lac' ••ttriaf 20 fufll~ d .. n th• l19hls 2Z flart of eltctrlul "'"hlne 24 An tt110tfon 2& Aged l1 Couoty lo Ttnnuset 31 Ind icate 19rerment 32 Noted En9 lu1co9r1ph11 33 JfWtSh lrstival 35 lhn's nlc kn•me 31 Encornpa s- std by .39 P't rt. t• cert110 fr.,ks 40 Ball 41 -of UI• hour 42 Oallltd iltlOIOllSI, 4) CUtildt or Sel~1rk~ H State: Abbr: 45 Nohctd 47 CttUln book suppltmtnts '1 U11tpht's decl1lo11 S2 Mort unfrlend ly S4 Cler~awll'I '8 Tides COllPlnion ~'°"'who solll Ills blr111tl!ll't 4141/41 '1 Havlnt 10 Dot 40 Cut 111011 """ 11 S1111ll 1lon9 42 Collapsible loZ A11on's th• Thames sheltfl c0111p•nlon 12 Noc turnal 0 Refection '3 Peret ··-sound 44 1'b1ndott ,4 Kind or l3 Felt Ytry 4& Companion perfumt strongly 1plnsl of tic and 104 &S Take 21 Lose tautntss 47 Followln9 It easy 23 Minute In time Mi Graf-.. rr.1111 U Golf shol 61 Certain lookl 2' Compenutt 49 Vaulted 27 Endlno uud clrculat with pro roof1 and telt 50 Writer l Capture 21 V1tlc111's of bt1sl 2 Accu111ul1t1on surro11ndin9s f1blt1 ol Ice tults l'I Oppoffd Sl Kind 3 Vtfy dulrous to: Dial. of conleat 4 Soothtd 30 Govtmtd 55 l"r ior: 5 Neon, fOf ou 34 Subltcts Comb. fl Morstl to annoyance fou1 1 Santi -35 Buen I 5' Sltn el I "ollu inalM\lver pa In of •angtr 3• E•h•rt 57 Cou asttay • Pttt. to 37 Achlev.1 .. nt Ml Muslcil cert1ln 3' Gentral's tnstrutntnl: DOWN (~ns conctm lnfG'inal Wanted· One Male Lead &.By VY.RNON SCOTT roll'. Wc'vt1 h:l{I offers lro111 "Women Jrne lo rrdd JIOLLYWOOl> (UPll _ Vanessa Redgrave. JeannP bhoks on odd sex com- Novelili Gore Vidal will pro-Moreau, Ca~I Channing, binatlon.s. Men are more I duce hl.3 new book, "Myra Barbra Streisand and Anne nervous about their sexual Breckinridge," for the Bancroft, amon& others. roles in today's society, screen if auch a thin" ·s even when it comes to tak· -a 1 That leaves Patay Kelly, possible. ing oU their clothes. The story dea:l1 with a Mia Farrow and Christine l---------- transexuaUst, that is a man Jorgenson r.s disinterestedlr=====;::::====..11 who tires of being male £'1ld parties. undergoes an o p e r a t i o 11 ''On the other hand. there which changes him into a has been a great deal of re· woman, or at least an ap-tuctance on the part of ac- prox.imatt<in of ooe. tors to play the male lead.'' In itJ ft.rat sl.1 weeks In the V t d a I s a i d with a stalls. according to Vidal. his straight face. .. Mother Goose story for Those who have read the adults bas sold 100,000 book •• copi'es, w"a'ch ls a lot or can understand why u Paul Newman or Steve "9HT "LM avu MAD•" books M Q '"' c.err-. us• MWt ~ In s~me cities the tome b c ueen would be reluctant -r-.. WIL ~ . .,,.n sold under the counter. if not outraget at the t.AeuH Hae" "'•" KMOO~ Now lf a book is that thought of playing the role • •.M. o• '"' ·~~~ "·" sensational -and it Ji;·-"Males are much moreT==========~tl bow do Vidal and 20th Cen· squemish about such thin,gs ---------- tury-Fox hope to mAke lt a than females." Vidal said ';===;::;:=======~n motion picture'! "And n<K just act.ori and <:<> "We'll do It." Vidal said tresses. I mean worD'!n ar~ on a brier trip to Hollywood. less ea&ily liboc.ked and "All kinds or?(''-· aroused tban men in anxiou1 to play the title general. ~-~-~-~-- Tune In the Colorful Sound of Or•n1e County Music! \ RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM From Fashion Island. Newport Beach THE LUXURIOUS llWU,_.. THEATH ~~:::;,__ ltOMI Of tO<., ... (NAii t.OCMI I I 7ot ~ASl IAllOA ILVD. \ V., BAl.IOA rf:lllllSUlA • UH041 ~ • CHIUt Wint PMllMl OMlY • 0,.. ........... 1111 .. , ................ , [ ==..:...~ I •toMUEA ... !!!,.•oo'!!L~ ~ ..... , .... , ..... ....... .4 ....... .,,..,. lltUCI BROWN'S 1'I NDLE$S SUMMl lt .. .. c.a. ..... women in love forced to part from their men. They include scenes from works by Brecht, de Maupassant. Cocteau and M a r g a r e t Draper. "Farewells" will be p r e s e n t e d for three weekends, Fridays through Sµnday~. at the Second Step, 21115 Villa Way, Newport Beach, closing April 28. Reservations for the show may be obtained by calling 846-1383. "TO llR WITH LOYF' TECHNICOl.O"• ENDS TONIGHT ....... ,.,.., ~..,,.. .. "TAMING Of THI SHRIW" I . I ' I I . f .......... SHOW · TIMtS , • , • • , , "'1flD1M ft f'IS . e: 1J • It: 1J s.\TuaOAY .... IUHOAY lt·• ,, •. , •.••• •· to:lt ,~,1 mesa ... .'j ', ~ • II ~ ~ I' •, "It , f. ALSO "8RIGHTY OF THE GRAND CANYON" CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 12 NOON ...,,.,, c.....•• ln-626' ENDS TONIGHT "ltL1tON DOt.J.AI IUIN" ':THI WICI U HIAMI OJ PAULA SCHULTZ" STARTS WIDNISDAY I DJTH IVANS ..... .,.A ........... llS' ACTRISS 'TIU WHISP£1tERS, acfM>.,.. • ., aRYAfl /IOltBES' l"r0f/1Xl•011 .t 'E WHISPERERS" -BDITH EVANS ERIC PORTMAN ....... ,...,,......... ............... ,.,..,,, l'lt"Ttll9,.. ~ NiMAR BERGMAN'S p~ .. ~,..,,,~ "..... . .. • • e &ACH • •LLt• • iUNTINOTON e& H • 947 • .-e ,........, ... , ....... 111 tmOt ~ f!UllS llUEANDBS llAIYOISYDOI RICIAIDIAm ' .. • • ~ c ( !'· .. r ~: :J'. !I· !f" ~ !J ~- i ;. --' ' ,, .. .. ' • • • • . • . . .. .. ~· ' . Sales Manager Appointed m~er. Prior to thb be waa a mtDlbet of the western regwn staff Cor Univac, a dlvlslon of Sperry· R.aod. He _. hDl5 had severJ} ¥ean' Ul>erience wiUi Q)n. t.rol Oat.a Corp. a1 a tel\lar sales enginecu and ltter N district sales ma.oager for tbe Los Anlelea district. Special Report OIL STOCKS EDGE AGAINST INFLATION Investors in oil stocks are benefitinc from the ad· • vantages of eontin"utd arowth in th• industry. ;! Oil •i:i<S natural fas account for 75% of U.S. energy reqUtrements. • Major oil companies are investing millions in the exploration of off.shore petroleum fields. • Stock prices are low in relation to 11rning power. Write today for Lester, Ryons & CO:s recent report on oil stocks in this month's issue of "Investor's Digest:• Other attractive investment opportunities are al.so reviewed. This report is sent to you without oblieatlon. LESTER , RvoNs & Co. S-..1 IMJ#n S11tt 19U 3•25 E11t Cout Mii~ CoroM Del Mar, C.lrfom•• Tt lephone: 673-8380 MCMH llS HEW VOllK ITOCll a c .. AHGC P'tcttlt c .. a1 Stoel! [•< ... "II• • A"'•rtc•• Sto.k ~•cha.,.. Plu• otfldtll Harvey Lynn of FOUD• tain Valley bas betJ1 appointed comptroller and office manager of South Coast Plaza and Town C e n t e r, Costa Mesa. He left Ha.sk.lru & Sells, CPA firm in Santa Ana, to take tbe position. 4 S&L Execs Attend Confab rour Newport B a 1 b o 1 Savings and Loan Associa· lion staff m e m b e r s represented the association at the recent three-day United States Savings and Loan League Management Conference in C o l o r 1 d o Springs, Colo. Tbose attending l h e nssioos were chairman ol tile board P. A. Palmer, president Agnes Blomquist, assistant v I c e president Gordon Redmon. a t d escrowdepar lment manager Dorothy Haley. Material gain. Five textile stocks for your consideration. TelCtile stocks have outperformed the market so tar this year. MOfe and more Investors •re realliing the speed and extent of the industrY's earnings recovery. E-F. Hutton thinks there are some unusuallt 1'ltrac· t111e values 1n lhe textile group right now. Arid ~en. o&r~e five ol lhe5e stocks in our latest reseatth r[>port which ~lud1es the field thoroughly. Want a rooy of this rt:PQrt? Then :,end the ';QUf)Ol"I. ThPre's no obl•Ral1on, of course. N~me ---------------------"-~-----------·~::: Address I : . I 1 • City State Zip Code __ ' ~• Telephone I -• Business phone I . !' 'f: E. F. HUTTON & COMPANY INC. I .. if .· I ,. ME'MBElt NEW YORK AND PACIFIC COAST STOCK EXCHANGl!S ANO OTHER LEADING SECURITY AND COMMODITY I XCHAHGES ~· ' ... NO•TH AIN STRUT. SANTA ANA. 141-010! I ~ 21• EA5T lllOADWAY, LONG eEAH, '31·2'7' L--------------------J " .. [ " ~ j: Now open and serving lCOSTA MESA/ NEWPORT BEACH llrlll 111•1 for you ••• courtesy and 1enulne friendliness. yo"r Hvi n11 ••• hl1hut Hrni n11 In insured safety. l.0/-o =:~= 50{, ~.f;":::= 7Cl ,. .. of 7Cl for • yHr for r -~·"""''""M•fll11tlhwflt.OM. ' Worth War and Peace - • . . UXW.. NOTICE . . . ... LEGAL NO'Jt<":. . .. ,. ,. . ,,,,, .. ,,..., bAJLY PILOT JI LEGAL NOTICE c••'"'"'" w auSIHU. c .. T""'" w aui1111u. """* 'IC'IT*ll llAMa "CTITIOVS MAMI ""-""°"'tltflM doel cionllV ,_ It c-Tiie _,\! ..... din QnltY llt 1, uin ClaTllll(ATI 0, I USIN&U rilllle • .b11tiMtM •I *"' .... S1r'91, ~ 1 Ml"-11 t4ll ,. "*""'' fllCTITlOUS llAMI •• Mnt. Ce111or111t, ll!!ller ,.... t~ '"°'· Cllllomle, u-• II"! llttlllevi l'M 11~r•1vnec1 " *'"' Ille\' •r• I Giit firm "'"" ff lllto.T~c:-P•OP' I ncl """' 111.... of ICltYST Al ICL6AR ..,., (ONIV<ll119 1 buJ!fttu 11 M K.,l>of' ttltf NI• llrm It ~ et 111f '91..._, ~I Mid 11m1 b c~ '1 "" follo't\I 8out.v•rd. Cttl• t.t-. Cllllttnle, 11!!0fr Ille ..,._. W11eM M1M (ft Ml flfllf ""-1M --· - -c;. NII -IMt ~ f~lllouo firm ...,,... ti C0$TA ti r«t~ • • Ioli..: el ,...lclMct It '1 tollewli • MflA CAR WAlM and !llfl .. kl firm I• And S tock Ma rket ..... E. Qtvt~ ~ 1-. Sir ... , ltONlld L. WtftCll, 111 J0111 ~ 11_, ~el 1111 fOllOwlM --...... C.... Mtw, calttorl>la '3J'H. 1..a. ' """"'t ill 11111 """ •i.e. ol ruidtflU •r• 0.ltd AP'11 It IHI, O.ltd ~II t, 1,.. H IOllows ltebtrf E. Gf .. I RONld L WtMt HaNV E. lk>IWt, tMI Hl-ttl $tr .. !. $1elt Of C•ll!onlla, Ote-C-Wt lltlt of C'tUlorAI•. 00-C-1¥· lot AllQtld. C.lltornlf f0021, 81 SYLVIA PORTER What m.Jefit the stock market do alter the war Lil Vietnam finaUy ends? The way the stock market took olt on the news ol deescala· Uoo and Hanoi's re1ponse was so dramatic that you 1w-ely mlgbt w o a d e r wtletber th.is has been the pattern wben previ~ wars have ended, Alld lf there are aoy lessons at all to be learned trom the put. In this column. you'll find the facts. The measurement is the familiar Dow.Jones avera.ge of 30 industrial stocks; Merrill L y o c h • Pierce, Fenoer & Smith sup· plied me with tbe Ugures. AS YOV STUDY the pat· terns, ponder these fwi· d a m e o ta I lmplioa.Uooe; which I found lD them : First, no matter what lhP initial trend at 1be end of three previous major wan of the 20th century, stocks went on to all..tlme peaki. Thls happened In the mid· 19'lO's aftel' World War 1; in the late 1940's aft.er World War JI; In the mld·1950'~ alt.er the Korean COllllict. Second, the direclioo of stocks in ~cb period wa s, as ~ou might reasonably ex· pect. profoundly influenced by whether tile end or hostllitiet b r -0 ..u..g.h L a business slump and if so. how severe it was. After World War J, Uiere was a sbort but f u I 1 • fl e d g e d depression and stocks col· lapsed: aft.er Korea, the re was only relief and an eal>· in.g of curbs and s.tocks skyrocketed. ' THffiD. you easily could bve been whipsawed into financial obUvlon if you tried to outsmart t b e po1twar trading trends. But if you bought sound stocks and held, you prospered. Now the det.alls. World War I ended with the Artnistlce oC Nov. 11, 1918. A smart stock rally began almost at on<:e but in late 19111. it was aborted by Ule fact that the U .s .. ecooomy's transition t o peace was handled s o stupidly that the country plummeted into the "silk shirt depression." In 19W· 21, stock prices were cut l>y more than half and it wasn 't until 1924 th•t the market regained the levels of 1919. Jn urn, atocks't.ook off ill an historic bull market. W O R L D WAR n ended with V.J Day Oil Sept. 2, llHS. The initial response was a sharp rally, theu a decline, but this time, no depreesion was permitted to develop and the stock drop On APrll e. 1NI, before ,..., • Nllet't On Aprll l IM&, boloc• -· , ·Notary 0 . W. 1ru110w. W•lwlnd WOOd1•"1 Public In and for Mid Sttl•• MrM)ftltllV l'ubllc In eno fvr Mid S1110. o•"°"'lly 14111', C:.Jlkl<nla •-1'9d R•t I . Oa¥t1 llnow• .. ,... to •ohared lloneld l . Wendi tnqwn 10 me O•led Ml"!\ 11, 1..e was hefd to les1 tb"" " .. n.111' " ""' --~ -1• wtiec••bed 10 • ""' ---'-n._ 1. '*<•It>-""'" 1. '""" -~ ,... • IO .... wltlllfl ININmtfll •1141 IOIWWleclt• "' to Ille '"'"''" IMlr-t tl'd o. w Truaio. C.'efll. oct ,,. ntc11loct Ille -Klt"'w'-'" ht tucvtt. ~ -Ste~ of Calltornll. Ort,_ C-IYI The market slumbered for COFFICIAL SEAL) !OFFICIAL SEAL) De ,,,.,(!> IL 1-be1'f• ,..., • "'*""" ! Oovil Jes4"I t O•ltl• Holtry Puolk " •11• ..,, M'4 $t•t..• .. COUple Of ye&rl UOUl Ul Nol•<Y l'velllc • C.lilon1la Noll,., PubNt C•lllO!l\11 ffUont llY •-•red .... ry I!, l ull!\ 1™9, Sl""kJ aoaln t""""" off. PrlftClpel Office '" Prll\Clt>•I om~ l~ .,,., o. w. Trvllow kMwn lo "" ... " ""' • .~ o...,... COllftlv 0r11no.Jt t.\l"IY be '"" ,,.r_ whOH 114"'4S .,. aubKllb· The Ko~an war ended in MY (omml.tlOft ElJ>lrM MY Commli.slon £••Ir.. ..0 lo "" Wll~I" I"'""'""'' ... a " Ua Ju114 11. 1'10 • Ju,,., ti. 1'1t •ckl\0Wle<ltt4 lheY ~llt<Wled file M11t11, lWO pDal&I -truce De80 • l'ullllthH Ort n91 Coftf 011IV Pllef, PvollV>t<I Ortnot (OHi 0.llY P'llol, IOFFl(IAL 5'ALI lions starting In July, 1951 "'-n1 '· 1" u. ,.. ,,.. ,..... ~·11 '· "· n . -. 1... J-~ e. 01•1• NOl•rr Plllllk<allfor"I• and an Armistice In July, LEGA.L NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE: Prh.c~11 Otla 111 1953. Dur1""'\he truce .talks, Or•"" c ... n1y 1.. flu'!;l d · .... Jn SUPE'•IO• ClOUIT 01' TMI p ntn My Comtnluklfl EulreJ stoc~ UC uate Wl·w a STAU 011 (Al,lllOINIA '0" CllT""ATi 011 eUilNI Sl, JuM 11• 1'1t "d Af•· t h TMI COUNTY 0, 0··~1 c llub!IWI..., Ottng• c-· O.lly Pllet. Wl e range. ier e ........ Fl TITIOUI ""Ml Mtrch 19, ,, Ind Al rll 2. '· ,... '1NI. A ' l' t •·-t l t Ne. W tnt 'rh• vndel')IV•ed dott cerllfV ,11. 11 ~ t<:e, s oc~ wen n 0 ICOTIC! 011' MIAlllNG OP ,.TITION ~lno • MIMU ., 1~1 l e.ch an almost rw>rpendiculat ad· 110• flROUTI 0' WILL ANO llOulevard, Wetlml,.iler, Cahfornfe, \Hider LEGAL NOTICE r-CODICIL AND 'Oil LITT I I I 1111 ftc1111ous llrm ,...,_ of CROWN vanc:e. l'ISTAMlllTAllY I USINES.S SALES alld Illa! wld tlrm -------------------E1ta11 o# CNl'lt1 I Fr-rk:k" t 1" It ~ of Ille loolleWl11t "'-' 11•2'1tJ k._,. ts C. E Fr-rlru, abo It,_ .......... ,..,,,.. '" lull llld •leu of rnldtnc~ ClltTIF\CATI 0, IUSINISS KOR~A \Y AS • much CNrlts !dwln F'""1clls. 0.C.•U!d b u lollows ,. Cl tl IOllS NAM" ..mailer ~1A• H. th NOTICi B HEllE8Y Gii/EN TNI Ar~ H1>111ln. '03 WHI 111~ Streel ••• !~· t11:'..,;s1 -· ttrJ~'!' I .,., " '-VllU "'' ui8fl e Miidred 0...nls ll'recterldlt lies flied Co.I• ~Ml. Calllot'fllt . l:.11;~ ni ~· ~,,..,, t~.,~;tt A~; world wars· The ArmJstice heroin • Pellllon for probate ot will ftnd Dated Aorll 1. ,,.. Of Rh fl. ~ "pl}il'.fGTtlSWs111~d • Codicil and for ls.wane. ot Letters Ar lene Huv""' l~A~ u li rm •> comPOSad of ~ meant tJhe eo<J of detested THltmtnft rv lo Ptllll-r. n!l~llU lo Sii~ ot C11llOl'l\le. Ort•t C0\1111¥: 0,;.r-::lna 'i''~de ~ nrom• f!' ull .._l d tight mone'j whlell Is made fOr lurlMr perllcuC.'l. Ind Oft "-r11 1, IHI belOi'O mt • Noltrt t 8.;~,~ '' n~~~ ltow'h ' f l and the• staJ'l Of 8 major Mme Ila• bee" Ml !er "-•11 2', 1 .... el _,._ Alltfte HUI.... _...,_ lo mt Olltd Mord\ i. 1 COl!u" S an . lf\11 ""' time ttld olee« of htlrl"' Ille Public II\ and for' wld Sl1te,' otl'MlnallY Pe<•lll\CI Drl•1 Ttt\111\. Calt;....11 mat • •:31 e.m ' '" 11\t <OV<l'l!Oft'\ ot ~rl· lo be ''-Pt"°" -.. ,..,.,. Is ,.._,,.,. S ti•'...,. K~lfn•11 p I a n t e x p a n s I 0 n • ,,_, No. 7 Of Mlf oourl, et '" Nortll eel 10 Ito. """''" lnstrumMt ..... lt tt of Ca lfomlt , ·-l;O\ln"': modernization boom lroed'N•v. In ,... Clw Of S."11 ""'· •<knowi.clotd w execultd ""' same N:' ~~11 ILi 1~ .. • 1 • r • me. • . Callfomlt. (OFFICIAL SEAL) t>e~ll' u •'.,Pt~•ed 1'°:r r:-, dS!tlj: WORLO WAii I Dtle4 April ,, IMI. JoltClh E. 0.•I• ICQ!'r .... 11\""' ltnow• to mt le ~ Ill• DOW.JOlllS AYllAAll W. E, ST. JOHN, CounfV Cler~ Nottry Publlt • Ctlllof'll•• f!!rSOft whoH. n1mt I• subscrt In ltlt, Nov. llt.'2 lfU, Jen. IJ t:S n.1111, Mln'lll. JailllM'I •M lrlfttt PrlncWMll Ottlct In -:;.• ..,llhln tnllrum•nl Incl td<IWW .-.ec1 1no, Je11. 109.N lttJ, Jen. tto *11 West ,,_ 5trwt. bite llU Orenoe Co.inlv 13-Mf.c~~ed ihe _.me J6.H lttol, Jen. uo:u lat. Att"1tJ, Cllllfer .... M ii MY Comml\llon Eu lrM 1 ·~~1 eofl I '"'· Jen. Teh 11UI UMHJ June 21. ttlO Hf>J.!.,., t.~l?t•.•f,t!llonile WOR"O WAR " A"-' fW ,......_ Pub>l>/lt<I <><•flee CMtl 01ily P11o1. Princ1~0lltc. " 1945. 5e0:,W"",~~s ·~~~:~ '"·" A;~.bl~~ ?:.''19.:. Coul O.ltv :~ AHH '· '· ••• 2'. ,,.. ~ a-:1:,,.~~ EXOll'fl 1t.16, Jen. 20us 1u•. Jan. 111.s.1 LEGAL NOTICE Juftft 11· mt IU7, Jen. teo.u 1ff0. Jen. 101.M l.EGAL NOTIC~ M:>::~1~ ~~'f:,11)~~' 1/l/11' f,~ O::~~~:. c~~~i'I'o1 ca11r1111CAT1 o, 1us111us. ctntF'icA~r~'! iusiNus LEGAL NOTICE 101, July 260,10 lfSS, JUIV 2U.Jt Tht -~~~·~ ~~ he 11 con· '1CTITIOUI NAMI ltSJ, Jen. 215 4t ltU. Jan. 291.U ducti"' 1 bull~• al tl1 So;illl Harbor lh• Ulldtrtlt fttd -c.,,lfl, ... h llOTICI TO ClllDIT08S 1Hl. Jan. ,.l 7' lt.l.S. Jen. 40f.U AN!wlm, Ctllfvrnlt. u~r lhe llc11tlo.i; c:onduclln~ 1 ~Inna ti 2lJl Ell>I SUP'EltlO• C~•T OF TNE • nrm NUM of PIONEER POOL SEIVICE COHI HrollwAY, CWONI Oii Mir, P STATI 011' CALIFO"IOA FOOTNOTE: When Pres1· co. alld 11111 .. i. "'"' 1, aom-eci of 1fMI o. l o• 16. ce111..,,,1a nus. u!lcler '"" FOtt THI COUNTY OI' OUNOI d1mt Truman witbdrew from :~~:1: :,;n~ ~ ;-:i::.1." tun .,,., ~'rii1~N1z:~ sE~'t.~u ~ ~.~ ~1~ h taie "' 1<~i!:~ '-YCk•. .,.,, the 1952 race Oil March 'J:l, Herold E. H•Yt· 1"5S Wrl ... n..od "'"' •• comr>osed ol lhe fellowing perton. ~ .. wn •• IC•lllMI ... McCorTTlack P.-,dt,, 1952 '".. StOCt. ...,..,i.. t did La .. , North Hollvwood. CallfwN• WhoSe """"'.In lull tlld •lace of (Hldel\Ct as 1Calllle111 F. Pt.cite, and as ICallltetn • 1ue a. ~ . .,..a.e Deled MarCh u IHI k u lollows. Fltr•nce PIYdct. o.c ... .,.. nothing. T h e Dow..Jooes Herold e. H•Y• LloY<I 1 ... 1110, 1•0 vw. °'' ore. NOT1ce 1s HERHY 01vl!N 1, "'• Stille of C..llfor1il• 0 ,.,,.. Couflly N ... Por! leach, Ctllfornle. tredllors of 11w •boll• """"" oec~t average closed at 265.21 on °" ,.,,,11 s. 1ffi, _..re me, , Hoterv O•IOCI Mardi is. ,..._ ~' au "ttons 11avt.v <l11mt ao•'"'' Mar 'l:'/ • at '\l:!I:. 44 on Apr 5 l'uiblk In •nd tor ""' SlaC. ---•llV Lloyd larnen Ille wld ~· •rt tt<llll'HI "° flit •• ' '-Vol· '. • eoooered Herold E. Hna ll~ lo m• to State ol c1111 .. 111e. Or•nv• cev""' I"'°"'· w;fh Hit nKatWrv vouc:ll•"· "' ThlS Underli~S ttJe Ul· be 1111 ,,,,,_ -111me Is su!>Krlbed On Mardi U, ..... Mfort mo, • "''· olllct Of tht clerll 9f lht •00•• te la ti th t -W I 1 ,. "" wtltltr• lllff"""""t ..,., •cknow~ Notary Publlc In •"4 lor uld Slalt. tnl1t1..i covrt, ff 1e Pttttnl !Mm, .,1111 fpre 00 a 8 ed h~ uecut9d lhe HIM Pl'l'>,,...11\' ·-·· l'lorf-le-~-1 ... --V ¥0t_,_ lo, the UO. Street's upsurge after Presl.· tSEALI · · 10 "'' to ._ IM .,.rn•n w!IO" name d"'lgned 11 •n• o111ce o1 his Allorne• d , Nat Gllbfor! I• substrl~ lo ~ within lns1rumMI ltRov J Koo\, 3901 Dvques"• Avenu.. ent Johnson s TV address Notary Public -Calitornlf and acknowledted he tucultd th• WIN. Cul-C•IY. CalllO(llif '0230 which .. was On the move toward Prlnclo•I OfllLe In IOFFiCIAl SEALI l"e Plttt ol bu1lne1\ of lllt und@rstvntcl Los Anot~ Counl'r JO>ec>ll E D•••s In •11 "1tlltrl -ltlftlng .. tht osltl• peace, and not 00 the news Mv Commlulon h•lr~ Notary Puollc·Ctl1lorn•a of •••d <ttc:ed._,1, willlin sl1 "*Inn lh I J ohnso Is bow' g l Ftbrutr"f I ,... PrincJPll Offlc:t In '"" t~ ltrsl public.tllon of lllis nottc. a . n lD OU Publls"" Orenoe C~uf O"llV Piiot. Orang• Covnly D1lod M.,ch If. 1'61 • except m the sense that this Aorll '· '" n lt, ,... *·" Mv Com,,.1n1°" Eu 1r" Ju111n Povdte, s.. .• . Jun• 'll. 1970 E •«ulor of the wlll el 111• might speed peace. LEGAL NOTlC"" Published D...... , .. ,, Dell• Pllol. •llo~ named ft<-n• Propert11 Exper t Eugene V. Doyle of Costa Mesa has joined The Property Manage- ment Co., Anaheim, as an executive manager. The firm specializes io managing income prop- erty for owners. a;, Mtrch 26 •!Id "'''" 1, '· 16, 1961 S09·0 ltR•v J. !(--------------------->Ml Ouquttftt A••-C .. TIFICATI 011 IUSINEn. LEGAL NOTICE Cul.,.. Clfl,, CeM1 ..... 1e ,.,,. '1CTITIOU$ NAME Tel: (JUI 11'--04N21lJ U,_9128 The 11ndertlontd c10t> certify he I> <.on· 1'·!"11 AllHMY 1w l1ecv1., duc11"9 t bullflt,I 11 Sul"' 8. F. A A C • CAT l'•·U1Y1 Control Tower, Or1111e County Alr90rt. E "t.i'crtT~ou°t N~illllll. Pullll>t>e<r Orenv. Co.sf Delly flllef, ~;:!• .!:~ ~1t!l~c'~s~i;:~~~': !~11::~ T,.. wncers•uried does cer111y h• " Mardi 1t, ,. •no .,,,II ,, •· ,.., 4rt-., ...ild firm Is comoosed of Ille lolloWlnt condUcttnt • butl-• ti eon Valencia EG L N ,,.,.on, wllo1e name In Ml ....i Pim of ~~~~~· t.:"~~.~i!~ 11~:"~-Co~lot~t: L A O'l'ICE rnldtn~ It H tollftwt: --------------------Ro~ J. B•nls/t, .. _,, I NCi\, ~IV~~ ~;::0~7~! -=~~;.m ~~~~~ SUP'IRIOll Tc~~T Of' TMI C'ril=l~rll 4. l.... In 1\111 Ind Plett ol reslclt11C• 11 •• STATE 0' CALIPOlllllA 1101 Robert J ltnlsh tolio.n: THE COUNTY OP CNtANeR Slate of Callfornl•. <><•nt• CollnfV· CNrle G RUOlt. ton l/1ltnd 1 Drlvt, No. A • IHll On APrll f, 1'61, bftort me, a Holat'V Hunllntlon 1 .. cll NOTICE OF HIARING OF fllTITIOll Public In 1116 for Hid Stale, .......... 11.. Datod Al>rll t, It.. FOlt P'ltOUTI 0, WILL ""' 11011. tpo .. red •obfr1 J l tnl\11 ~wn le "'41 Charlt1 G Rub"' LITTEltS TUTAMINTA•Y. 10 ... the oerson wh.nt MIN II subs(rlb-Slate of C•ll•ornl9• Ortnt• COll•fV• ht••• of MINNIE M. NEILL. De(;N .. .., to Ille within lnrlrum•nt ant On, A11rl1 1. 19". belo•t mt, a .Nol•rv td. •cknowled9.., ..... eculed tho Ull'\t Pubt.c In .,,., tor MIO Stale. llet''IOn•llV NOT ICE 15 .. E•&•Y Gii/EN Thal (OFFICIAL $EAll • ·-·-.. Cllarlo c Rvblt '"°"'" ,. WALTER K. N!tll "" filed btrtlr> J,,_11 I! Oevls ,,.. IO be the ~rson wlloM fttl"t • ffllllol\ tor Prtl>ete of Wiii and Nol1rv P11bllc • C•Ult<llU 1' subscrl-10 11'' wllfll" 1"'1'~1 tor 1>...an<• of ltlltr> TUI-I•"" P"nclt>tl Offlct In •lld '"'"""'_ .. he uocuftd Ille....,.. lo Ille .,.1,tion-r, rtfertnee to ""'Id> O•lntt Co.i111V (OFPltlAL SEAll " INde tor turlfler Nrticulara. ll'CI MY Commission "'"'''" Oe•I• M Rubio ""' IM flm• •nd &>lace of .... .,1 ... JlM\• ,,, 1970 Ntlt r\' Pvbl" • C•~•or•I• lh• ••m~ NS been ~t to• Aprtl "· Published Orang, CoHI Ot1lv l'llol, :;rlnclP•~ Ofl~t In 1968, M t.30 1.m , '" tt.. courtroom ,\prll t, 11, n JO, 1961 JIJ.61 ,0'7 1,nol/t 1 oun1 D 1 ol Dt11•''""'"' No 7 ol wlf ceur•. •one • r ••· ol 901 North llro.dwev, In Ill• CllY Hunrlnolon l•ach, <:t llf 01 S.ftl• Ana. Callfemie. Com. En ~t 11. ltll OATED: "-<ti 1, " .. l'Ubl"f\'°4 Ort"'f CMtl Diii• Prlot W E H JOHN, LEGAL NOTIC'E 11·1''1> April ?, t, 16, Jl, '* ~ C-ty Clort. .... snu IOLTOM. O•OI'' • OUlllll NOT1C1 ANO c uT1,..CAn LEGAL N()11CE "' wn1 m Sfrttt, s.tt• m 011 TUNSACTlllO I USINUS L" ......... Ca ......... MtH . UNDIR A PICTITIOU$ NAMI ,. 2tt1' Tali tlJ • ta,,_. The u"41t,,1gMd do t..rebV Ctrllly lflol CllTllllCATI OF° COtt,.O•ATION 1101 A-Vt fer llt fltl- fhn are P•rtM•• I" ""' , ....... ,,.,. T" ·NJACTION 011 u Pu•ll•lltd °'jl""' C..st Daily "'""· 1rensac11ng bu1lneu In I~ Stale ol ~ I lllllU UNDI• Aprll 1. J, ,, IHI $41-41 C.lllornJa undtr ""' fidlllOUI ,.._ of '1CT1 IOUS NAME Lf:GAL NOTICE· RIVIERA ENTERPRISES with lflf II('!... THE UNOEllSIGNED co•PO•ATIOH tlNI Plaot of buslnt>u •I 2$15 Octtn does lltrtbY oerllfv 11\tl If ts cenchoctl,.. loutevenf, 9.1, corona del ~r. CounlY • butlrwu toc:attd al IMO Monrovia, of o........ C..Ufornl• m2s. TIM "'"'" CMI• A.Ina, (allfwll••· """" ,... Ile· T uwi end olac" of rtsl<Wl\Ct of u CI> of 1f1f flllou1 llnn nerTlf of MA.STfiA CRAFT SUPllllOlt COUIT eP TMW Pl'tn•rs are 05 lollows: DIVISION alld llMI H id firm 1' COfl'\-STATE 0, CALlllORNIA FOlt Millon H. Halldman, n7 w"' ~~•nlh of lht ftllowl119 eorpe,.llon, Wllot• Pri<I-THE COUNTY 01" OltANel Slrttl. L.,. Anvtltt. canlofnlt t0017. clpal P1•C• of bu•lnn1 II es follo.-\: Ht. A • 11114 Laurent• Boolht . Trust" ulldtr Mnltr S1>ecltltlff Compenv, 1640 NDTIC! OP NIARtNG " fll!TITIOH Dtclarallofl of TN11 dated Mudt l Monro"1a, Cotll ~ ... C•Ulornla "6'7 "Oa P'ltOIA Tl OF WILL AND 'Olt lffl. w.s OcNn 8oulenr4 .. , Co~ w.•n~ess lls ll•nd "'" ,., .. , .. LITTl!RS T"$T"'i'INTAaY. <!el Mar. C.Dlornla 91677 APrtl, "" lhl•te of MARY E. PATTERSON, 011td• Mord> 11th 1... M.,lff ~cltlll•• Com,,.rw ~ued. Milloll H Ht0fldr•1111 LM R. H1llo~ lf()TICI! IS HEREaY GIVEN That Laurtn<t loo"'4 Prttldt<ll HEliN M SfliSE, ~ Mlll!N I Trt11lto under Declt•al•Oft 1Cor90rtlt Seat! All l(EN NS n1e<1 r..reln a Miiiion of Trust d&led Marth 1, lt.11 STAT£ OF CALIFORlllA, tor ~rabelP o# Wiii t nf tor lnlHlllC• ~TATE OF CALIFORNIA t COUNTY 0' OllANGE, '' ol Lett-rs T"N""'"'tarY lo 1llo H llllon•r, HOW WELL DO MUTUAL FUNDS PERFORM? !CO\JNTY OF LOS ANGILES 1" On thll lat M• Of ""'"· A.0 \,.., rrlorencr lo Which It made lor lurlfl•r on March 13th 1'61 belor• m• • belor• ""' • Notarv P'\11>11~ In •lld partkulln. end 11111 1llo lime "'Ind '"" Noltrv Publlc in' t lld ' tv Slll<I siott, lor .. Id CouftW ..... Stale. r"ldlnt OI hffri... Ill• Mme ~ llttf1 1.t I o-t<Ontltv eoaeerf'd Miiion H H•ndm•n IMreln, dulV CO'llmlultnetl &ftCI •WO"'· tor APrfl It. IHI, al t :lf e.m, '" kllOWn 10 me lo be ~ _.. wfloa. PlttOlllll• •PPttrell LH R. Hellaf'bero •~ courtroom of Dtta•rlmtnt No 1 l\tmf' It Wbs<rlbod to 111t wtt!llt1 '"' .,_,, lo mt le Dr ~ Pr•sldl>nl el "Id to.ir1 et Ml Nof'fll l roadwtv. jlr\ltMnf end eck-l<idtH It• UtCU~ ot the cor-•tiofl 11\el Utalled "'" In ~ Cllv Of S.n'9 ...... C.IHornl•. Ille ••me wllfll" ln>lrumenl on beh•H Of ,,,. c.,. DATED: ...,...11 1, IHI (Oi<PICIAl SfAll -•lkln ~In 111med. and t dlnowle<l!I· W E. $T JOHN, Helen R l(fy od lo mf 11111 Midi -•'*' _u,... Counl'f Clel'll. Notarv 'P'ubllc • Cilltornlt lht t-.nt. In Wlhwu Wllerto(, I ~ SCUODEll, 1101101 a NIDLl'I" Prlnclpal Office '" M,...flto !><'I "'Y lwJnd •1111 efllxM my IS:ltf Su,.... lllv .. los A""los Co\lnrv offlclal .,., lho du er>d .,..,. Ill thlt 'HIRC P't llMfH. CINI. MY C-lulon E•olr.s c.,,lrtule flrsl •bo•• wrl1to11. Tel: ti> • Uf.IJ11 t SePt 27 "" 1s..11 an_.,. .., l'tllU-. Wltllt ii h r.c:ord of the mutuel funcb7 How wet1 did they perform durin& the 1966 merket decline? How did they perform in 1967? Could they have advantages for the rrowth·minded investor-or should he be c1utious? • • To help you decide, Goodbody is holding one·sess1on Hminars, designed to clear up questions you may have about those mutual fund5. These sess1ons-pr1 · marily for Investors already familiar with Mutual Funds -will attempt to probe into areas generally not covered by the usual investment sem1rt1rs -1ncludinr tht importent income and 1rowth situations. Whether your aim is possible long·term 1rowth of cepitel or higher income. or a conservative approach, we believe you will find this advanced seminar most interestin1. NEWPORT BEACH WEDNESDAY· APRIL 10 Conducted by: Paul Skillman and Jim Chadburn THURSDAY· APRIL 11 Conducted by: Dennis l. Halloran Goodbody & Co. 4 501 Birch Street (adjacent to Oran1e County Airport) Sambws from1:30.Jo 9:00.e.M. ~_.. ......... P'"'Wt,.,, ..... te MutllM F~mtnt - STATE OF CALIFORN IA. 1 E J ....,lo_. PuDll$MCI on,... Cot1t Delly "'""· COVN1'Y OF OllAHGe I u Nolt rv PubK( In and Aorll ,, l. '• IHI W-U °" ~rdl 1'1!1, ..... belort -· • :,.": ~=!: ·~i·::· LEGAL NCll'ICE ~::::;;.u~Ult!l~~n,edandla:.":•nc':ld 11!:~~~ JulV 1, IM Trn• .... \Mdtr Dtcl1rtll0fl of Tn1st dtlfoO Publl>llell Or-COISt Dal1' Pilot, ~OTICI 0' SALe 011' ltlA~ flWO- Merefl 1, 1'61, known lo -to be 11'1 AJirll 1· f, 1'· 21. lffl ~.. Pt •TY AT lllllVATI SALi P!'rcon '""°" ntll'lf It subscribed to Ill• No A·SJ47' wi"''" '"'""..,."' '"" ac1t,_led1M'd ,,. LEGAL NOTICE '" 1111 ,....., c-.t .. ,.. .. .,. • •V"<VIPd Ille ...... (t Nfo""I Jt. tM fW lfll """""' Olf IOFlllCIAL SEAL1 Orlolnal r<e:o<O In tlle Offit. 01 11\t Of-. l llll•n O.l&eron '°"""" llttordtr Of Oranoe c-rv. In lfll Mani' of ti,. 5tfaC. of LAllllV Holt,.,. Publlc C&llfor,,.. Coll!O'ftit Oii ) 1'"411 .. D«uMtnl No A FRANKLIN. "'"° ·-.. lAR•'f Prlnclt>tl Ofll<t t.. I 701S AR THUii FRANKLIN. 1lso lnown •• Oun•• Co.i'llY ... ,, ...... LOI 111"' ... .,..,, Hel1M• lAWllENCE A FR.iNKllN, •ko .,,.... .. My Comr!llulon t .01... NOTICI OF U l!ACN AND OEFAULT .. LAWRENCE ARTHUR FRANKLIN. ,OICl!:;-M~Ltl~·~~ AND 0' ELECTtON TO CAUSE SALi dt'Q~SP'd ICOHUollllll. Cl.AH • .,...... :: ::~;T PROP'HTY UNOU OHO u~~:~;:.,·s.~11!:.~1'!, G.:.~~-:·~. '':: •llet'M\'1 Ol ·Uuaft -Tl'Ull No. 6Mt 111• h•Ohttl -IMS! D'4tffr, -It<! IO II•• ... ..... 01 ... StrMI IN Tl<( MATTER ol 11\t °""' OI <om•rm•llon "' "'• lboYe "'"'~ COUf'f I.et A--., (lllfernC1 NIU Tru.1 ,,,_ bY ICtnf'l'tfl A. Sv-Oft or •flt• At>l'll 16 '"°'' ti lht offlc• '"'!ls"'°" Or•-CotJI D1i1' !,~~. tftd Elal!W G S-n. lll8bAt>d .,,., (of ROBERT l HUMPHREYS. A""'1ocv t i """ '· , .. 13. JO, , ... ________ Wiit Ill lllr>I Amertcen Tlllo IMw•ntt L•w. ·~ A6em .. $ullt *' Cltv Of Cosle l.F.GAL NOT1~ I. Trutl C0tn,,.nv, Trut1", dated ~. ...,.,.. of Ora-. llele of Oocemller tS, 1'61, •Mordtd J~,..ry C•lllornl•, ell ltll rltfll. flllt, l11ten1t1. tftd 10, lffl, as Do(u1t>tnl Ho 4JJI, In '''"'' ol Y\CI ffe:tdtnl al llMI nme of TAX COLLICTOlt'S OFl'ICI 8,,.. tlft. oaue 2• ot Onlclll R.-d .. ~ath """ •II "" rlthl. title, ... ,,,,._, COUllTY O' OllA .. GI In ft.. office ot ~ Covntv ll~r tflat u ld esla1-has ~red by _ ...... STATI O, CALll'OllMIA "' Ounot C.ounlv. C1lllomle, ~,,,1119 of lllw. or o-lw. tlher "'"' "' In M· NOTICI 01' SALi 11oa T•ICU ,,,,_ Olt>fr Ol>ll"llons • no~ tor CIJl•Oll to t1111 ot aalO ~ et Ille fl"'° Ott UNSltu•ID P•OPllTY 111.oot.to In faYOf' Of JOHN MACNAe Of -tfl. In •l\d .. ell 11\tt cttt.ln r!tl W H ! II E A S, MA It Q 4 It E T C ltf Al TY CO or -r .,.._,,,. 111u11td 111 1111 dlY of C.t• VONHENKLE hn fall9d lllld ,..t!O!Clff lo NOTICE IS Hl111!8Y GIVEN ltwll Mtw <OUnlY of Or-. staC. tf ooy, --""· leirn °" u_.,rHI • brt•Cll of en oOlloallon tor wlllcll C1illor'll11. 11\d more N r11CulerlV deKt,. 1........ 111 ,,.. "'"' " t71t,t2. 111111-N ld 0-of ln.sl It • se<urlly hu td •• IOI_,, lo wlf: ustsWCI tor Ille vMr 1N 71 lfld ,,.. 0«urrt<1 '" 111•1 ~r• h" -• P•rwl lit. It WHElltA.S. u-tnd lrl ~lrlue of Ill« ci.f&ult I• 11\t P<IYll'\tnl ol lht ouartOftv T"" _,._. Ut IHI Of h Ntftrtv -lsltns of $odlon "'• "' IM Cellt6rA11 "'~'•'.,,.."' of lntt'rt11 due on Mid nott-j ttO ,.,.. Of Ille --ho 63 IMI ti Ille llwe...,. ffld f.,..lloll ea.. "" tolltWI"" on S.,~r JO. , .. ,. •"" •11 • .,_....,, "'Vlfl1>•1Y Jlt IHI el I.al ~ llelNW .~ 11n-.. ..tr" tor ttw PUroo<• _,..,,., "'•'•llrrw>"'" end rermi. •• _. .._ --_.... 141 "' ..... , Mlle •uctltA ftr ,... \Alltf.OC· HOTICE IS HellEIY 01V£N ""'' flOOlt .. -"· Ml-'ie-IN-. ''°" of said .-.111 i.1n. .... ,.... w11~ ..,,_, '9111111 "'' -,,,_ " "" "'°""' ti Or-c-w. ca...,_, ~•lllft "'°''°" •nd cttlt ti wMI. ~mane• tol 1111 ollCIMtiQil el ~If P•rc .. lit t NOW. THIAEllOltl , N01'1CE 15 '""'°" _ .. ,...., '" """r•Dll • of An ~-I.., -tN Mlle fff9'o Hlll!IY GIVEN """' "'" ,_,., Te• $o<flon .. ()I <31d Otf'd ot T•U\1, •o ........ --.... _,.,!¥ .. ''" of Collf'clo< of Or•"41• C011n1V, ul\CllOr •nd W PaY bef~t lltl"'-ft(Y tho .. Y,,,.,.h 1llf ftl•Hrtw ''° 11'111 61 I.el ~ Falrvl.,., vltM ef "" 1ulflotlty f_..._ by -on • 1>rlor -fl fl'vt l, Whleh ,,,.m..,t. "'""'· •s P9f' """' ,........,. r~ 14 -•t ld efll(.,, Wiii .. ti •t 11<1'1nt •oK• NVf' bHft meclt W ,,,. tl-n~l(l•ry fl<tOlt I, -71, A.lltal..._.. ~ tlon to "'9 ~~I ~. fer (tJll, It-I "' llMI amo\11\I of IJM 00. •nd ~lll•CIU<'lll rl'<Crdl ot Or-C-tv. cau,.,,,la, mtft"Y f/I Ille Unll..t Sltlt .. on '"" ltlll h t .... If '"" TERMS Of 5.&LE' °'"" "' lewf\lf f•Y " A ... 11. 19'1. •• .... -.. t rM ""'' ts now qwj"' -UftNtd --· ot "'" Uftl ... , .. "" of 4'!\tfla .. ""<toclt P ~ .• fl MICI ..... t i 1llf Olli<~ 11 Mid ,,.It lllt """ OI 11 IAOO ot •t111C•••~ coniormall• at wit "" _, Ut11 "'11t Don s ~v. C-tv t,. Colt.ttet. •lt IM lllttntt ~'"°" lrem Jl/f'C >o. "" "'11l1nc• t~nqd lrf note.,, ,.,.,. s«u<M N ........... atflte ...,.., ca'"'""" 1111 I Y , .. _ ot -.., .. ~--lltf•vll "" morfo190 or -tf !NII ... "'" .... lollowl"' dtM:rllled ••-'¥, or .. murll II It 1'1'~ df<llll'ad 4flat flit ..,.,,, ~rlY w 'IOICI. Tift ~ 11*'1 fl4 "''"°' •• ""'" ti. ~l'Y· It "llltlt el .eld llNl•lf t mcwnl ot 1M1ld nott emounl of bid .. ~ II. l!M _,. lt•M· ~ wtlll -.iltM\ elld all ,_ sums -url'lf b• said All bids or ~ nwet lie ltl """'"' afllll ~ .,.-fhl ci-lt f/I ~ ..-11 0..0 ti Tru.f It lll>fMel•llly -11\11 •Ill tit rKtl .... at "" ...,_,_ ... Pit, "'1llllw-lr!llf iOl'll • -" Hr•""'· tfiCI lltlllfot" II' ~,..._ tltt,.,........, Wlfll .... .__...te,,.•11, CM l•t Mt C:S"IMl1 • 31 --' .... _.., ..... fll Illa uadmJtatllL «.-Ill. JtMLwtf\-11!1..f:...~ If -C..-CMIH 1iMt1M ......... _..., Ille Flr:al Ametlotl TI1Jt lftN'ata lbtlllt ~ Qwf et "'1 "'-8f!W_k Se"" !l!ttf,. 11)7 .. Y\. Oflw, I 'VII C-. T""'" -.under, WOfl<.tlltll ftl -.,.._ .... ~fte ...... ~ OllllS"'4 ....... _...., tlot(rlllotf ~ ..... ------°" ... _,,_,fl ......... titt -fft fllt -tw~ Ill Nlf 0... DATIOI .-.,If I. ,..._ f,..., "'' hft after.._'°"·~"''*'• .r .. ceT11•. --- r;.:...=.;;...w;.::;llT.JGriy ~ .. qillq; ·----___ lot rts«Y.ti9nl . -- 000 D BODV & CO. ' u~··~••.qJn.•OUL.IVAJl~COU.l UA 12111. 111•1 , .. , •• 111 ............. ,,,.,.. HERE COURTESY IS A WAY OF IU l llES S LIFE " .. , ...... '"' Aft~M'i ef r •• ,.~, IM*'n.t'<'--"'t1 t"...,~ 4501 119'CH ST •• NEWPOf'T IEACH • 540·1121 Owl 90 ()f'ftc..t th~ the ........ ~ tOld, 1111 CWll"' Tt• Qtlttoct.f fl ti Trvtl, 11111 ,..ll<t 11 f\trthtf """'"" Tl-el ~ tw ,... OI ~ nt•flet t"i!IHllY, "!flt -(tllfll(IJ. .......... ,... ~......, """""°"" "" be9fl _..... "" '""' .. -lllt Mlt Cf\ Mt ........ "'"' .._ 1M _,.. tnCI Olllvtrtd lo Mkl Trvl'" Su!N'rlor Giii/ft Mlf4 Jl'IHffl ill tflt -CllaW· ... tllt< a Wf'ltltfl dftllrtfton of Nld brte~ Ml~ J, f''tMn~. '°''II • .. II tf Nit, tM 1!W tlttt llltn "" ....... IM t """"" lllmtlld tor ~ l1f ''"' ..,.,..._ ...,1 Iii tel4 -dlt•w. .,. .. 1t ~ ulcl ""*fflo '1f tOflft ...,,.... __.,.. Ot• 4""11 S. IHI 0.fM• Mtrttl )I, "ti ._. L. M• I ''" OOH S MOlllY JOl4N ~(NAe llO LTY Al_..., .. W.. <'_,., T•1 (olll(IW COMPANY IMt ,..._ 111 Ora-Ceynr, •• -MHN& C..lt M-. ~· t v .. H~..,. 0.-tv e v· Jt.., E M.<lcM~ ""'"""' .... atrtcWM• r t.,.11\llt<f °"'""' ~•I D•llV l'tlof PVMll'*I Ot•ntt c,..,, 01l1Y 1'111)1, ~lltM>d Ot•"" (.,. I 0.tlt flt .. """ •• ,... )1).41 41tfll '· •• 14 a. ,... !.IMjl ....... ,... ..... ~~~~~-~-______ ...,.. ___ ......;~ ~ ' I .. -~ -, •••• -1 .. . --· ... %! DAILY PILOT Tuts&;, April 9, 1%8 !:!H:!!!O:....,..U..,.,,s=e=-s -=F=o=R,_S...,A:-:L ___ _.,.';"':H-o 01U ... SES FOR-SALE_ I ~~s FOR SALE - ~, ltENTALS .. I .---u~ HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSH FOR SALi HOUSIS 'OR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE -~---~~~~~~~- G.Mr•I 1000 G.neral 1000 Gen.rel 1000 nt• Ana ...... 1630 --.&-Ne.,.,t lwh .,., Deluxe Harne & Inc. RM oo 1" ~Ronn l _,_ s. 3 1250 1000Generat 1000 -----17th St. Shopping AROU~D n£E CORNER. See thls beatltlfully RE· MODELED TWO BEi). R00'.'.1 home w\lh BUILT· JN PANE:LED KITCHEN and QUALITY CABINETS 12' x n· DINING ROOM. large refll' yard. LEVEL R-2 LOT -BUILD TH A T OTHER UNIT. Thi8 Is a must . . . for only $19,000. CALL TODAY. Eves. Call 646--4579 Gsrf~· 2414 Vista Del Oro Nrwport Beach NEAR BAY Ytt, you live nght In the middle or a gorgeous green perk. Colortul Oawel'I! line the winding walking ~. 3 Bdrm, 2\'J bath.~. lge tam rm, lrplc, lo11drd with mod/bit-ins. Carpet3. drapes, 2 car gar Celec door) Pados front &: rt'6J', life time red tile roor Spa~ decor. Pnced al only S42.500 Ph. 644-1133 Vacant April 20th THE BIG ROOM Newport Beach No Down To V•h p i y• Deluu built·ln ldtcben. anoram c tew 1tunning tMna room w1lh Of the bay. lights and Cat• toe bumin& fU"e'place. 3 ~ llna la1&nd from the UVUlg f'OOl'T\a, 2 lari,. sparkling room and rar~n dt>Ck of batha. BIG ~perale paneled th11 llOO sq. rt ranch home MULTI PURPOSE room Att you look111g fol' a 4 BR for Pool tabl• and family home which 111 rreat for tn-tun. Quality wall to wall car-tertalning and also an ideal pet.a and drapes. PATIO. family bomt with tis targt Beeutllully I a n d a c a p e d rumpus room and room loc grounds enclosed with block a pool! Only $•19,950 with a wall fencmg. A STEA.I. $25.· low down payment. ooo. Cu1tom Value A large custnm 3 BR homf' WATERFRONT LOTS New Waterfront Secffon Just Opened (Fee simple land) Waterfront lots, including boat sllps. from $33,000 Huntin9ton Harbour Sales CALL DICK FABIAN -"47·2531 We will mail you lot maps & financing information. Costa M.41 1100 ee.utlAll CllllOID-blt, an tnc:. Total rent Inc $4400 TOWNHOUS14 t EXCELLENT 1'f'W blt·bl tiec dream ldtcb-yrty. $39~ 58-'De. 548-C•1•1hlftity ~r & 1111111 dbl .ft.dris/b'ttur. G7f Qopta/drPI. ~= LOCATION rup ,\dbl oven. dahwlbr, 1 -..-. •---L l70S 2 Bdnnl. 2 batba •• tlo. Corntr lot w/lar&e O>cd yd wp/d!n rm. fplc. blt·ln __.na ~ 3 8drms, 2~ ba •. . . • and en.t.ranu for boat « bookca.w. Pluab "''" ~ nu: BIY a Detach Rtelt)'~ cam~r. 3 Br, 2 ba. buce ltv bltwd an. FA beat. PLUS COUNTRY GENTLEMAN RENTAL O:f~ rm w/neyf WW carpets, aoor 2 lovely Furn Apt.a. Gantges, Early Ca1l.fomia at)'ied bome JYl5 w. Balboa. &Mt,. to ceilina trpl. Gleamln& ia-e priv/brldr p a t I o A /Olde Sp&nilb lnDlltnCe, 613-31663 E'v8! ---.-- brdwd fir. exposed din rm. ln&thtakinc Ocet.nview. nr lguel lleCt.lon of Lagu.na Fer L ... $300. ~ft Large kitchen w / bit-Ins. everythini. uldna $82.500. so ctr/frplc, blt-ln R A with =· te -dishw. Sep 1ndry ~m. Dltin Call for detaila. ''-____ _ house newly painted. As-on Income. etc. • $25.500 • S:l600 On. S150 IR co.-lnlum I sume 4~% GI or min dwn. Richard.ton/PUrcell ~t Miaaian Rlty ....,._ Ccf '44-l!!t Conv fin. Full price $23.950. Raley 6'1'5-4031 1' Drive by 2390 Fordham 2443 Cout Highway, CdM EE THIS. CUStom built Newport West f~5 w N 3 0 m s for only $3~.:ioo m Nl'wport ==========:'~!!!!!!j~';-:~~~;';'!!!!!!!! Beach. 2000 sq. ft. or over-HARBOR-VIEW slied bedrooms. 2t, bath11. L•d Isl Drive, then call 837-5065 forlmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill• charm home MAI' new. appt. DO NOT disturb OC> Redaced $3,000 rand OCeM mw. 2 BR, 2 cupants. A. Many built-Ina + kll c B BEAUT 3 br .. 2 ba~ drapes. dllhwahr, two magnificent fireplaces I q e HILLS and a large lam~ room. Lease $400 Corona del Maf --8 Y-OWNER--New 4 BR. 3 baths in $45,000. See owner. 30121 Harbor View Hilla Drlltwood So Lapna. 49&- Walk to beach.. SUS. Only $3,830 down payment. 3 BR. 2 ba home. Excellent : •e;.u..•. SP .. RRINIGN" G condition. Lovely patio. own-:. P. er/COl'lllder couple or small DEWIE TRIJ»lll family. May constdr r Lease1 • 7152 •REALTY Opbon. Cardener Furn •• "A.'llYTIME" Mrs. Raulston $44,500 Owner's unit with bttplace. di.shwuher. built-In k1tch· en & with all the flnest de- tailmg. The other 2 rentals help PAY YOUR WAY. Call now It 1tt the finest in income tax shelter. WHY PAY TAXES• 1801 Weatcliff Drive Coldwell, Banker & Co. Secluded Mansion Newport at Victoria 646-881 1 (Call atmml Anytime) 516,900 YOU 2().13 WESTCLlFF DRIVE TELL US ABOUT A Ba'· TER BUY! J BRs, 2 baths, large living room with tiJ't'o place. Built·in lrilcben with '"' l!Oltd hardwood cabinets, covtred patio It fencf'd &: landacaped yard S137 month- 64S-rnl OPEN EVES B~ CAREFUL R'S LOADED ly. with charm A: pel'!!Onality. 1 ~" 4 BR family room • COAn home, separate formal din- & ing room, over 192S sq. ft, WALLACE large all electric built-in REAL TORS ldtchen + a custom Fiesta 54(>.4141-heated pool, lovely tropical ,... •• (Mtl Hi911Wl'f --1 lff<ll. C1ll'-t. Ill .. JlSI O• 1-- -SPANISH MANSION 4,{XXl square lttl of roman- tic Sp11n1sh living. 12 acre of l:'l"Ollnd. 4 lx'drooms. Din- ing room. Family mom, R u m p u s Room with Bar. Sun Room + Basement. Yes, l'VMl a SWIMMING POOL. Whert>? ln Costa Mesa of course. Price S55,· JX1J and wonh every blt of it. ----Ir: COSTA MESA OFFICE 2629 Harbor Blvd. ~9491 Open till 9 PM 8/1 OPEN HOUSE DAn.Y THRU FRIDAY 1-4 522 El Modena Newport Heights NO GIMMICKS! ss2,ooo llJ. ' . H_un_t_lntton...;;__a..dt ___ ,_ __ Just a nice 3 Br. 1% bath Delaney Real Estate 3 Lusk • built homes located . born~ In top condition. Entry 67J.3'170 .Larie 4 BR, 3 BA, den, LEASE; 3 BR., carp~, ' ., In the Soulhland's most de-hall din. aree. lboth cal'-~!!!!!!!!!!!'.!~~~~~ ram. rm. L&e. hid. pool. bltm.; walk to A: sinible & fa~ting area. petedl. h.w floors, many :.: patio plus 2nd lot. lhoppin&. $187 Mo.; ·~~- Schools & Calli. lrvtnt extras 2211 Raleigh Ave., Lido Isle 13.S 1 $59,500. Equity $30.000 Brooldlunt A: ~ Campu.s just mom e o ts C.M flw appointment only> NEWEU. ASSOCIATES 'JIJl11 ·~ 1 away. $22,900. 541-3575 SPACIOUS • ~ • Sensibly priced from 52' lot on 11nda comer LIJVELY OCEAN VIEW S:W.900 to $48.900 Collana Perk 1115 2 8d &: lanai, tplc, lie Lanai patio, uled brick frpl -•-living rm, huge petio 3 BDRMS. 2 BA. $4.1,900 LUSK HOMES CHARMING, Quiet 3 Br. plans for add'n. $54.950 CaJJ 496-1243 bt-twn lf).5 pm Direcuons: MacArthur Blvd. R C GREER Realty home. Has l!Verything. Low · • • OR, den. 2 ba, 3 frplc, best 4 from Pacific Coast Hwy. 01' ..,..,6 v· Udo 67J.9300 ---'"' I Newport fwy. Turn oo San malntenanct yard. Pnctd ...u 18 · north end. o«""""""e oc. 1 Rd th well below market -$69,500. 494-7664 Joaquin Hi ls ·· en ~ or 549-1623 eve1. Huntington Beech 1400 follow signs to model area. ---NI I L 1200 A REAL BARGAIN eguna gue 1707 Harbor Hi9hlands _N_ew ......... po_rt_Be_•c_h ___ Only pm down buys thl OCEAN VTEW. NIGUEL Why Pay More HILL TOP channing 3 BR, 2 bath Terrace. 2BR. 2BA, Den. s $28,950 ill all you nrf'd pay borne elec. bit-ins. petir Cpts, drps, Comer lot. for a 3 bedroom plus pool NEWPORT w/~plt. With total price Landscaped * $52,950 , home in Newport Beach. Fl.Ill view of beck bay -4 only U4,500. All this + pri 499-1.344 or 547·7'161 Tastefully deconted and bedroonu -plus • plus -vw:y ol a corner' lot, CaU 4 Bdrm, family rm. . neat-as.a-pin plush carpels Enchll.ntlng atmosphere not 962-44TI. In MONARCH BAY. and fireplace, 1~ baths. leuetiold. Nothing elae to WNER. $51,000 6~2S9'3 Cloee to Westcliff shopping compare. $64,900. and Marinen School Hurry TIIE REAL ESTA TE'RS on this~. 64&-nn ~2313 962-44:..;__n..........,~=--=--:--;-5¥>-8-;--1-03 Colesworthy & Co. -C•n Have View-COURT SALE OF WATER to settle tstale. Located in IA2·7777 R-2 vacant comer lot the nicest dtvelopment in lOOi Harbor Blvd .. c.~. on Newport TalllJld H.B. Should be selling for Optn Evts. Seller will Subordinate S34.000 but opening bid oril part to owner/Bldr. $24.000 with 20% down $350 Down HORVATll JU.TY. Could be best 1>uy of th Payment 67S-1972 67:>4073 eves. year. NR Bay & ocean: love1y 3 Paul Jones Realty Buys your family 8 home! BR 2 Ba home on 2 lots: 847-1266 Eves. 842-5844 You'd better see his 3 bf>d. room. 2 bath cbarmt>r with .;an ui.e as 2 apts. Rm. lo BEACH NORnf y e 5 l[1llage Real Estate y r . 0 D uplexes For Sele 1975 Beach Ville Duplexts 3 bdrms 2 baths each lide. Deluxe throughout. Drapes, carpeting, k1tchen built·lns. enclosed garages. Ideal home or mvestmtnl. In d~ mand area units minutes f rom ocean at Huntington Beech. Beach to Slater, East 2 blocks to Geraldine. rncome approx S290 mo .. pymnt low as S146 mo. Low 6 '4 % int. Number limited. 110 call now. ITI4) 8-47-64<6 Huntington Harbour WATERFRO~ HOME ·:~i 3 BR 2 bath, priva:~· . Immed. occupancy. at $435/mo. Bkr. : Logan 847·2531 . ; '410 4 BR, 1" BA tam. tieiol•. Fenced yard, nr IChools, Spl'inklel"I. $215. 842-59n ..tt 6 ~:: U90 Townboule; 4 BR..,.,~'it ba., pool, frplc., dbl. "'·· carp .• drapes: 962-lm: Laguna Beach 111>5 Rentals Av1ilabl.~ Apts Ir houses -all~ Janges. We need addi~ rentals Ir property liltl!fiL CUSTOMERS W AITilil$ Beckwith Rlty Laiuna·~ 62'7 s. Coast Hwy. 494-~ MONARCH BAY ARfi LOVELY OCEAN VIEW 2 BR le den, l ~ ba, cpta, drps, trpl, pool. $225 m4 Adults 496-1243 be.tw 10-5 pm (n.....-E I land9C!lping & many more 1""il•lliillillliiiiiiil•• ...,,_., ven n9'l extras at a low price or $34,. It '!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I 250 -owner says "Se II." 3 bedrooms • 2 baths. Custom cpts/drps. • Bit/In kltchen. Large POOL, plus lovely landS('aped patio. Block &. Glass Gr~nhouse S!><'cially priced for quick sale @ $30,000. hardwood floors and big ~Id. $46.500. Sell all or '1' 4 BR. 2'it BA, 2-story. yard for the children and int. or trade. 1Z1 4lst St" can minutes to beach. Famil pets to enjoy. $132 per monlh park In rear Owner 673•2719 room, dining room, 2 ca includes principal, interest, 5 LARCE Bdrms.: Ivan garage. Dec. bit-ins. Ce ta."<es and insuranet. Wells built. 3200 Sq. ft. me'lt driveway, block wal I, . Many extraa. Assume !l1A% fenced yard. Nicely land loan. OWNER 646-2828 · scaped. Former mode Waterfront 62 Balboa Coves home. $37,000. Call owne I 2-2 BR Apts yard, gar., Quiet Eutalde, C.M. $3000. dn. * 534-2588 TOP Of the World 4 bdtm home, just redecor, •silS. 2964 Mountain View Dt.;or Bch Home + Income 3 BR. 2 bat.hi. large Liv I'm lovely patio PLUS 3 BR. 2 bath Aipt. $48,500. LIDO SANDS 3 Bdrms, 2 Bath1 $23,SOO George Williamson, RJtr. 67l-4l10 OPEN EVF.S. ONLY $21,850 *$18,000* ZM1I 10°/o DOWN 1003 Baker C.M. 546-5440 Inuned. pouesgion this 3 AP-ZONE BR homl!. Cement driveway from ~t to rsr of lot with the extra \e.rge double ltll1"8~ llJld with an added room. l~x20 covered patio 11Urrounded hy beautlful JandM'aping with rock wat- erfall. added 9Pftte for boat nr traller. RJtr. fWS.39'28 Eve. 642-0185 OU!ce ()peTt Sat/Sunday *LACHENMYER Close to 17th Str .. t Existing 2 large 4 BR houses. SeU 1 or both PPr· milted tn be ~ed for Ors or Denial offices, medl· ca: laib. exhibit ha U, a.n· swerl11t service. ~nt>ra I re· !leel"Ch, photo studios etc. Price reduced for immed- iate sal.-. Comer 63xl25 ad- jotnlng 5axl25 to alley. Leon Vibert, RHltor 548-<1588 anytime LIDO I SL E-- 673-9200 Eves: 548-6966 ExclWlive listing with: Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. 2025 W. Balboa Blvd., NB Look To Th• Future Qu11lnt l bedroom cotta2e surrounded by nowt>r~trl!es. All on a R-4 55 x 320 lot. Ex· cellent income area • Buy now build later • Unbeliev· able at only $21,500 Huge Split Levell In desirable Baycrest. but not lease bold, this is an enorm· ous 4 BR, 3 bath near-new home with a marveloUll f1oo1' plan HuJ:r game room f lllrge rnough for 11 pool ta· blel wilh a m;issive rtone flrtplace &: completely se~ r 3 BR. f15.000. No dn to 847-6640 alt 6 p.m .. anytim qualified buyer. LI g.7771 _w_eek_e_nd_s_ . .....,...-=-=-::-- e BY Owntr. C\lst bit, 3 BR. 2 $21,450 Ba. home. Lge. lot many trees. Only S31.500 642-2859 GI APPRAISED rMMAc. 3 BR 2 Ba .. bit-ins, cpl.8., drps.. trpl. Lg. brick patio. Nr. Schls. S29.950 67l-0450. ~96 F ixer • upper 3 BR, fam. rm w/frplc. Needs some paint. Owner's purchased new homt BA YCRE.~ :\ BR. 2 BA, ram BRASHEAR REAL TY rm. s·..,-~ ln. 1935 Commo-847-8531 968-11 78 e R ENTALS Houses Furnished Rentals to SIMre 2005 WANTED 1 sln&le girl 71 + to share 3 BR apt. with 2 others. 673-0695 att. 6 Costa Mele 2100 VERY clean 3 bdrm home with large fenced rur yard. completely f u r n i 1 h e d Available April 10th $175 month. Agenl 54€-4141 call 729-4748 collect. ~· ! Condominium' 1950 WE.5TCLIFF 2 BDR,:. ~~ ba, beau decor. plualr<l'ta. lovely cov. patio, all elec k It c b . w sh r , d r t;eT, pool/sauna. dbl gar SZJ;,lae 673-8112 RENTALS Apts. furnished Cost•~ 410o ~~~· Owner. ~. Fonner Model Hom arate from the Uv1ng area! BAYCREST 3 BR 3 Ba. pool. 50 Wk u~ Formal dining room, break-, h be d 3 BR, formal din rm. cpts Lido Isle 2351 $22. • r. ...... ram. nn.: aut. ecor. sv ~ ---------I fast room, 3 car garage. A SSG.SOO. Owntr 64&-24n drps, bit-ins. Assume ~ / 224 VIA Lido r.urd and 725 • studio' Ir Bach apt.a.,. , RARE BUY for $61.500! FHA loan. pmnts U52/mo Via Lido Nord. Call 21.3: • Incl Utill Ir PboDe ~. Ruth Pardoll, RHltor Newport Heights 1210 TRADEWlNDS RL TY 934--0920 213: 271>-4547 e Meld Service • 'IV ~ 16(%; Wtstclitt Dr. 642-5200 _ __. ___ ...._ ___ 842-5011 or 842-5012 • New Cafe A Bar 1 •' 0 Fantutk 3 BR home on quiet cul-de-Mc street. Nicely car· peted, freshly painted, beeu- titul custom built-In kitchen. lovely covered patio It many ni~ bearing fruit treea. A mu.st to llH-CALL 540-1.151 Country Club Colonial Abeolutely beautiful two story ~ across from the Mesa Verde c.c. 4 bdmu, formal dining, lal"g'e tam. room with ~place. Do younielf a favor and see thia beau· ty. An exclusive w l th Mesa Verde Realty at $59~"i00. ~A VERDE REAL TY 546-S990. Step Into this bright & airy 2liJ t:. 17th St. &16-1-194 Pool Time BY Owner $22,500: 3 BR. 1% Boat T .... ? laqun• leach 2705 2384~ Newport Blvd.~ BA, newly carpeted. Nice Of rat r ---------yac· p!ltio in rear, insulated cell-Lovely corner with breeze 1 bDRM with vitw, tum, SUS CASI ~: =~:~1~. c;:~~ I TARBEll 540-1 i20 the comfort of yoU1' cheery 2955 Harbor Blvd See this lovely model homt, new wlw carpeting & dra~ es. · Complete dream kit. Outside entry to bath for pool. Beautifully landscaped front & rear. Only . inRS. Alley access 1 or way 3 BR + 114 bath. An'/ $135 mo. Call Edith New Units Now Rentjlljl •camper or lrlr or new type financing. YcMabon 837--0530 dy. Eve, Furnished BacheloJ Ir~ 2 BR yr.round vaoaUon • borne. S47.ooo. Costa Mesa garage. Close to schools. H1ffd1I Realty ~4-3474 1 Bdrm Units • 4 BEDRM • $13,000 -3 BA TH Rm. for pool. 2501 Margar-"Homes to Match Incom Medallion by Hotpoml. et Dr. N.B. 213:256-'2265 8740 Warner 842-4405 RENTALS ruo Newport mvd. : e" . It WHEN Have you seen In Npt BEAUT. Glen Mar 3 BR Hou ... Unfurnished $1<ii. Lovely large 1 iR. iohn mac:nab BAYFRONT DOVER SHORES Senta Ana Hel9hts 34ll Ea11t Coast Hwy. NEW 4 Bdrm, 4 bath, powder Pool Home Corona del Mar 675-3745 nn, d11ung rm,~ Social Country tm~ with rm. Pier & Slip. 6¥. ..,.~ fi. fruJ a and ~ N 2 St OK'Orated by Barker Bros Built • in electric kitchen, dishwasher. Large petio. Ex· tra storagt in dooble gar. agt. ~t'TZO $32,500 293 E. 17th St. 646-1494 Hgta 4 BR. 2 ba frpl, for paneled den: carp .. drape Costa Mesa 3100 Trailer 6: cabana. $75. for' $21.600? Can be seen 5Cr'tttled patio. Im ma trailer. 642-1265, 133 E:uftb Mytimt Owner. 2315 Holly FHA appr.. $25.650, x 1 St. COit.a Mesa "; • 1.n .. NB. terms. llorth Cosl1 MeSI ATrRACTIVE i bdrm. mttU AVAIL lmmed. Olft Haven OWNER 962-2518 pd, $87.50. Want ~et 3 Br. 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean 4 Bdrm. 2 beth, trp.1, sprin Home for lease. 4 BR 2 baths m at u r e c en t le id a. n II, c. nt nanctnj? • 157'-On. lo qUall-dft<nt::::a_ J Bedrooms:;; ew . ory TARBELL 2955 HARBOR Attention Real Estate Broken k· Vu Inc Apt. $49,500. 548-7249 lers, fncd. on Cul-de-Sac, dining room, fireplace, bit~ ~ ~: fted buyt'T ........ S167.:i00 t.'ver)'thlng in tip.top condi· Call for PflC. lion. $25.250 Just 10% down. With 4 BR , lg. library with 642-8235 na; REAL ESTATERS irpl. Sep. din. & ltv. nns. --ONLY 5500 &16-nn 546-ml Exclusive uea nr. Park & schls. It's priced riihl; ex· MOVES YOU IN Desperation Sale cellent financing! Fantastic Newport Height& Owner moving out of state O.lta Rffi Estate 646-4414 home _ O:>mpll'ttly redec-mu3t !!t.'11, Neros help! Neat oraled, 3 bdnns. 2 betha _ 4 & tarn rm Glen Mar, few TRIPLE Cu.~om built-Ins _ Lease minutes to S.0 . F'reeway, Yea! l saKI, "Triple". Your option. Sl~ per month. clOM to schools, shops. Ask-mone'Y in 5 years or lesl!. nm REAL EST A TERS ing S76.000 • open to offers. Meanwhile U!!e "tax advanl· 64&-TITI :;.16.TITI College Realty !)46..581M) qe" pre-paid inlerest while l..~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~===z~!-i:-~~=111<15 beautiful acres in 1'8pid growth p111lem an-a 1tpprP. No Matter What It Is YOU CAN SELL IT WITH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD For Fest Service & b~rt Assist1nce date in value Can't miSll here. Only S5CXXl per acre. WAu.Y McCOY REALTY 642-0487 anytime 545-4.112 Newport leach Realty NO CRYSTAL BALL NEEDED Cameo Highlands 3 BR. Plus Fam nn-Pticed below l\1~. 675-1642 Evts SG-l'm DA V1DSON Realty BEAUTIFULLY LANDSCAPED lmmac Newport Bt'ach 3 BR + dining l,, bathl. Rltr. 7750 Harticx-SB. CM ~ Eves 673-1164 •1--------6 OLDER HOUSH $36,500 DIAL INCOME $A2S MO. Perron RNlty Co. 18ttt & Orange r::_m WANTED RC'al Estate Sales People. WHY NOT GE.1 ON THE BAND WACON'> Over 25 Years in Orange CountY • Full pege advertislng • lnttr office teletype • Training program • Insurance • Many other ~eflts Call 646-4494 • For interview COLLEGE PARK :I BR 2 baths. FA heat, fire- place. bullt·in electric R & 0. also refrigerator, car· pc>t~. drapes. A·l corwl11Jon. Cholcl' location. $74.500. Wetls-McCardle Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd .. C.M. :>411-7729 Eves. 644.(l)84 A llG EXTRA VA loans now available to S37.500 at 6"'o Interest for 29~ yrs. 100 • t loan for your buyers. ' Lander Approval within 48 hrs of appllca&ns. 2.2 million available. Contact: WESTSIDE MORTGAGE 17l t I 494-7255 ---Newport Beach Realty lrvin~ Terrace Darling 3 + r am rm • view • Immaculate • $<12,950 6T~1&1.2 Eves. 54~.1281 nr at schls, all!IU!Dt FHA IOA.n ins, new ca.rpetina 2 car rar· BACHELOR: SPACl'd University Perk 1237 00 cost. Owner will give 2nd ace, fenced. Immed ccupan-No peta. SUS mo. ; S25 ....... 892-4326 ey. $200/mo. Alt. ~1440 2-5 BR Lee 2-sty tam ·"""· Deposit req. 1975, ; . . ., ' nn .. OWNER'S Pruti&e. USO 4 BR., 2 Be.., llv rm., din. PARSCH. AP. 9. • Ml· ~ ... ~~~·Act rt. 3 BR.. atrtum. pa rm., deo; $2:50 Mo. 1BRdQpla..1115 AdaJta. T'Jl do. Dr. . ,.... Open 5241 Glenroy 546-200 s&-1061 bu Weelo OriYe. Apnt.. .:. , &.ck &.y 1140 842-7227 Meu Verde 3110 642-tm '" ! ! ----'-----OREGON bound, must lell ---· ------1 BR Apt., tum. 1115 r.t>. "1- YOU own the land. 2 Yr. 4 4 BR, '2 BA. Seeha~ 11om 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, tmced yd, Car gat'118e. Util. paid._ ' BR. 3 ba. 2 sty .. corner. Frplc. $21,450. Owner 64M2 pedo, cpts, m,,.. olt-ina. 220 Serlc:I 541-&MT e. 48 drps., cpts, lnacp, bltns. Lease S195 67J.5809 $ 1 4 O ATTRACT I Vcli , 0 Near new Boy's Club AS. __ n_t_a_An __ • ____ 162 DON'T ctv• It away, pt apactom, 2 bdnzl. ~ YMCA. $39.900. 64U2S1 AVAD.. Now! Phone 83()..2348 quick caab for It wiUJ a pa&, pr, adults. no Coron• del Mer 1250 lO'll Rl"er Lo., ()pen Sa Dally PUoe want Ad! Open 2234A Rutaen 0!1 t. Sun 1..S. 3 BR, R P din rm 642·5671 lt'a Bncb a.a.. 1:ml. !it. ---------1 HP..KFST NOOK, A DIAL direct 642$18, Qmae -•ledlloe lftrf' ... -.. Hirbor View Hiiis El.EC m Reduced your ad. tbeo mt ~ and DAILY PU.Or. o. erw • LL An exciting new home "w\th everythlna!" 4 BR. 2 be., to $39,481) lllta tv th-pbcne Mal White elepbantaT ~ Costa Mes. 1100 formal din rm. 1ae tam rm, ----bktst rm, fenced yard, nice BY CUSTOM BUILDER J)lltio. All th1s for $54.SOO. ~. -$~:~:-~;;~ -1 .~·1 Distinctive new home, Mtt111. 1 Mrs. Harvey Nicely shaped 1Wimmin1t Verde golf course 1 block ~ pool. N t • l Y decoM1ted Mediterranean SpaniAh ex home 3 BR 1 "t bat.hi, 2 car terior. 4 BR. \IJ'le lhing, · aar•ae on 111'1t lot. dt>:ld di.nlng and tam.Uy room's. 1 __ "6--l. & 1 --i l -; : end street. wondl!rful for F'rigida~ kitchen. 183tl Ts -.. ,_. 'i' :-..:... ~ kld1. $m dn • $20,500 lull hlti Ow~ call S4643QO, ..._,...._CM-- prke. Sl.51/mo Includes all. I Ev~s 54i.6J78 tu ....,, o. •- &% J;mRT REALTY I ALM0~1/4 ACRE zwE OFFER2 vou= 569 W. 19th St.. Ot 1 e EAS DI e a 3 bedroom. 2 bedl &auty, 646--3322 646-2301 located In a very olce atta. . I I r 1 r 1 r 3 Bdrm 3 baths Delu:itl' On By owntr 3 bdnn houH. ion· tiOH to &bopotng. Betiu1J. ~I A, AT I quiet cul-de-sac strttt and ed tor 3 unii., S~<;f. GI ful etirpetl and doubll! _ Mesa Vtrde Goll Counce Sl9.5ro Pnnclpel11 only. drapt>a. All endoted yard. I r I I' P ..... 1 •-"' waterf&lls PArt'" I &46-7745 or ~7"129 Double G•rnge. P're.ent • • • • • .,., '"' " • OJ ------Loe II FHA 9t $18200 .. I . -1 trrm11, Townhouse: 3 BR. 2 Ba.. · · · · , U 0 0 ~ Over • bl/rd.Md houMwlfe . . ,.. • r.,.-. • , "· I -:"· ~2 I :• ;"'• i •"•t-l;,: tk "t • D J MJ.5678_..._ .. .,. .... -0-cw- ruml"bcd. soo.?iro. COOd OWNER. Mon t I c t 11 o P 1 ~ 1 YOU OFTER us' I I ll _ ...... :-_ w •al••• _ patio & pool: 1nat toe. ld;;r I _ with a lorge brood to ne~h- CUUA..Jlh. ~ -.~recSeoor.: t= bori· "SOmtfiMil wou n ~ ~ r~y! H~ ~ L.n... -~-:-----" -4--9 mT~'°Ln 9" ~~Q~~-=:--J..-:r-J-==~J:= BY Q\VNER -H.t.ar h ctut or. SJiOwn 61 app'l. 54&-IN..O U.tA.M --1--" - -I DIRICT Attnctt .. 4 M ~ --. woOd bt'&.lft ~ I 7f'I JUST SAY CHARGE IT! old. '26.000. CAYWOOD RLTY. ~1290 m-w:-cout BWY:Na SF L! C Divorce Ferces S..l• Beck Ba)' ana. Corne houw 3 + tam rm at onty m.soo Wood roof. 15' lol MY t'ft· 90Nble ttmu arranftd O>l~rt flt-alt)' ~ ' ~ .. ;;,,.;:~ ·: .!. ·~~ ':4.~ .... --m=EVES. r I r I c: ~a--ir~~E! '.:'! ::--;A W:,,.ttt;: i:~ ~Call~~~~~~. ::a:: not I =~'0 r r t I' r I' r r I' r' 1-~I • e&'!t126. with block walls. MESA Verde: 4 BR. 3 Betha: !HM, Make Oft. Open all wt u;;: ::~It~ s.a ~~tt au:::~~. ~~ Rd. CdM G in;:a• I I I I I J I I I I I · ;f 8"t klc., xlnt R·l lot May S4.2.SOO. ~00 Alt 6 PM C.;..RANt> ___ BA_Y __ V..,.ID.,...W,...-By-• *'"" _,..., ~ -. ·.I trade for truck. tatt car J bdnn • ram. ~. CIP"' owner 4 BR. din rm. lam ! • or • 111bmlt wbAt YOU d!t14'. North a&. ~.-. rm. 24IXI lq>ft. am bid SCIAMLITS ANSWBS IN CLASSIACA nON 7020 I b'"" AaJdn& S3 %"iO &42-3589 °""""" US6 Auadn ~ 844-:;.;_251_&.;.._ _____ _. ___________ ~----------------- l '. ire ....... .-. -- ' . . ., .. ,,, -. ,, .. ,. . . , .. ' . ... .... .. -· . .. . . . ' ---....... ! .. QNTAU RINTAU AU RIAL m ATI, IUSINISS 1NI IDVKI DlllCTOIY Afits. ,.........., ..... u~ .,,.. ~ General PIMANCIAL .. ~ WO * Mw 4100 C•ta 1MM 5100 hHnl for Rent S99S lnduatrt.I a.Mat !!! ..... °!'11t;t ...... 6* WlLL Beb1*. -bome. 1 '30l!Ailtra'..._ ...... ,.ti. SLEEPIKG room b' day INDUST 1P9oe T3I • t• ~ SUPPLY cblld QI to 2 Jt:W1I old. 121> ........ C1lb. ... HAllOI wor1dn(. ll>be'r man. Prtv. w. 17th CM, m).Q)O IQ ROUTE ~~ V\c R&rtlor ..... -. ... ,. ..,. ba.' flllr/. m Wk.Mn-. tt,. ... • Ne eq. tt. cm> u-.i opportun11.y fer llWI ,,., .......... ~~11·~~-=--~-c.x. ..-ot woman eo reRd new aw..o CAJU:, Da¥ ~ U l a 2 BR 81EENS 6100 .,._ coin ..._,. wttb da)'I, bot lwiohea, "">'&at', _. lJlll ~. Htd ;-11CE rm. Ciood Io e . Left 11111fa ...U'J pecbpd rood tXPlf, nll. CM ~ -.. ...... ms. n.-St..1Gat5 ~lal bomt. SS5 wlUi productl H~ brand BACHJl!LOft • UNFU'RK. kit.ch prlv. 54H99I .-~ NABISCO No RELlABLE motber. Week. "!~!!!!...!'!"~dt!'_~4!i200~ from $100 $12J0 UP wt w I ldtdMll Ran lnvHtnMat ..Uln(. De~ble ~l'Mlll ~ only. A.-i..a c. M. •~ *1. Id $22."IO op Studio Apta. m.4% Oceaafroat cu net VERY H 1 a H ane. Call Ml-Glm __ _ 1 • 2 6 S BDRM. N~wport Blvd.. CM 54M'1l5 BOx«X>' _ Hwy to &acb EABNJNC!. Part or tuU llb.,.ttflnt my home * * * * ... _ ... ' u~rn.. ,.ft ....... c v·-tlrM. Requires $W0 to llou~··· 56-67M r vn.i,. •nv.v,. llEAL ESTATE, -·--~ ......, $.m) for tmmedlate atart. Reattid fOOJa, Oli.ld Clr'e Gen.ral 2 hCl:b bouRI llllrld trees Write tor per• o 11 a I I.Do Irle~ MHonry, etc. 4'250 Cat•, Adj. tD Sbopplna -OK for mult.1-unlta urvlew, fiYinc ' p b o n e • 6560 M--------1?CXI Pttenoo W1.1. at "lw-lnceme PNplrty 6000 lldl' new Dula Point Harbor number to Inter-State Di•t· '*' 6 Adlma, o.t. M-. • North Amerioen Roclkwell Co., 1811 West KateUa, SUlte MHS1'0 PRICED TO SELL plant lite 221, Anaheim, Callfomla AIL TYPES ,. a 1 o n r y , Brlc.k, Block, Cement work. Aleo repairs. All types CU· .pentry A Roof\ng. 636-2916. WtMddya Want? WhMdy1 a.tt SPECIAL CL.ASSIPICA TION FOR NATURAL IORN SWAPPERS Special lt1te 4300 i \.) ~ Wan4 4355 ,-..: • un!. Q)lllna An . 2 BR, . ... .. 1 ba. Balboa JI. Beuned .....i.,.::,,,....... pMio, CV· ~ 011.WS APTS. 3 BR APTS POOL ADULTS ONLY $125 __ _ Luxuri9Ut Townhout• Stud.Jo Apt. 2 BR, 1~ betb Elec: kitchen. Beautiful big pool. Nr. llbp'r. Adult.a only HARBOR TOWNHOUSE 2217 Harbor Blvd., CM JUST COMPLETED- Bra.nd new deluxe 2 BR with pnce. M . ea.,>eta, drap. es, bltna. Fenced patio. Gu- denet' maint. 3619 Santa Ana Ave. CAduJU Qnbr) 97.a380 Newport leach 5200 (12) 1 BR unltt + 2 BR lioftle ottered DOW at $139,000 !m04 5 lines -6 tirMS -5 IMlck1 ' llULH -40 At\USl IHC\UD~ Lot l«i' x 300' • No YaeaD-Call W1ll Hallberg AJlE _ _.,..,Y~OU_an_e.,..lectrl--,,...Clll.1....,--re--1-Wl\lt NU lleW le tr""' 1-W!\el rt1i ...... Ill Ir-a-YOU• ,.,_.. -/Of Mltt'I~ ._~ ""'1 ff -rtllU. dea. Price UOll,OOll -!liter 5 p.m. &42-090 pe.innan? You need me! BRlCK, Oiincrete, carpen. ~OTHING FOlll iAL e -l•AOl!I OHL VI $i.5,000 down. l'm a small elec rep41ir lbop, 11')' cu.tom Cabinei.. Small PHONE 642..$671 OCEAN VIEW DUPLEX dolnl a good bua. ~r jobl. OK Free Eat 962"945 To Place Your Trad.,'1 Paradke Ad let tr t moving. C.U! 1 can help '51 CHEV. Camper Bus. 27', 2 ~ ~ -~. ~=n: you make money. $3,SOO EZ Carpenterlng 6590 sleeps 8 self-contained. Val- tma. 524-5450 Bkr !NO JOB TOO SMALL! ue S250i>: tnde tor Dodge OCEAN VlEW M·l ANNOUNCEMENTS Relldent1al . Industrial Com-A-lOll with V-8 eftiine; call: 2 ~ett1. cor, lndw.trllll lite. merdal -M a l n t e n an c e 842-~ ~~ Neal J. Mllrtm. ll•Mlll!!!l!l!!!l!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!I~ and NOTICES Repejr Is R em o d e L 1HA--VE..,..-l-BR----&-:-.f-::B-::R-,BJ::.,-,ul11,,- ............, ""-""' ..,<ICJI R-... ...... CF ....... ) ..... "" fteuonable. Ur, bonded,·, Condominium ru.ooo and Rr2 lot QUJU.W •••••••• ~..,..,., ,._flllll ,.. -· -IOJ'ed TAX SHELTER R-2 comer .......... $10,300 e ...;..1..., Ml-5064 • $12.SOO equity. WANT F&C Don't mill tbil little mcoey Ollmm. with bouM •• $19.SOO BLACK Shaca do&· parking .,..... ~ or vaclJlt or TD' a Bkr. 675-2503 maker In Baclr Bay area. M-1 63x300 17 St •• , • $20,IXXI lot ~ HOlpltal k>o~ In CARPDfl'ERING le Roof· Oleahlre Real Estate Start conect1n1 mit tomor-. Other M-1 lotl ru,000/\.tp can for owner. LOI t ! q , All ~ • All work WILL exchange 5 Acres. row. $22,500 -Ea.lily ~ Lockhcnt Realty &n-5146 54&-?4S2 &UatMteed. ~m $10,IXXI. value, near Palm anced. 648-2311\ FOUND Female Vlzala about REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS Springs on duplex or lri· THE REAL ESTATERS 64&-3322 9 mos old. Vic 13th • CABINETS. Any siu job. plex in So. 01'111ge Coast 64&-nn 5'1'-23U iii. is 1 § ... Balboa Blvd Identify 67> 23 Yrs e~r. 548-6713 area. ~1131 For Sal-• Income unit·-. In. HartMir50 x ll:_ul .. ot"',.. 0757 .,,.... a ,,, --.....----:---• Carpentry • Cabinets • '59 Olds good motor w/other Costa Mesa. Listing rsn out. plus small rental WHrr:& Male cat. Sweet & • Bit-Int • Allerat!ona • parts '57 Olda Fiesta Sta. W. reducing price $4IXXI. Must $1.5,000 unafraid rentor cllllDOl keep. • Repaira • Reu! 646-9583 New trans. 1 owner. Trade sell .now $35,950. By Owner. George Willlam90l'I, Rltr. M&-1140 for 125 ft. 6 It. wood fence Trade equity for cash or 673-43SO OPEN EVES. CHILD'S Rod le Reel. Found Cement, Concrete 6600 or Mech. labor. $4>9187 truat deeds. st9--0833 off Huntingtoo ee.cll Pier. •CONCRETE WORK • HAVE: Apple Valley, acre HOME Is INCOME PARTIAL Ocean v I e w; 147-1138. Of All Types. No job 100 3 8R 1" be, frpk .. encl. Excel deprec/lnvest oppty 4 Corona del Mar. Choice LADID watch. Vic. Marin-Small. C•D: st:z.l038 patio, ioned for horsees. Br l'ff I: l~ Br l~ ba apt.I o'me lot N<n' letlllehold. era Scbool. Identify. 548-3281. ~M PATIOS &t Want: Orange County pr'Op ~fl7S.= .::-::...:: ~~!~ ~. I T 3. 2 01 0 BLACK Female cat vlc Block walla. Alao concrete or lit TD. 540.1402 Sonora School ln Mesa del • al 142 1010 GOOD 2nd TO. F.arly Ille Mar. ~6 or 642-2550 aa•ma mD09 • • * Ir ftqUired. Call Ow-lea Cltnn G'?"'. 6175 CEMENT Work of"any kind * lave DUJ.ILEX CdM. IN· I co $ bed ME S515 per month 10,SOO equity. Want 3 or 4 room h 0 U I t, CdM. PRINCIPALS only, 67>3349 APTS It Bual zoned vu land for 75+1111111. San Juan C.· Po. 700' fl"ont. can divide 9 lots. $81M eq. Trd TO, ! Owner. 49H957, 494-4653 Waterfront It dock. #2 Bal· boa Coves, NB. Equity $50,000. Trade tor T0'1, house or leaae/optJon. Ctsy. to Bkrs. 6754331 HAVE 4 UNIT apartment in Costa Mesa. Will trade for BF.ER BAR & REST AU· RANT ln Orange County. Call Owner ~95 . What do you think of our ''TRADl!:R 'S PARADISE" Drop ua a card. OaMttled Dept, P.O. Bos 1175, Dally PUot-, Npt Bch, Calli. * * * . Street ...... 646-81ll. 'lWO Pawn Tickets, v l c at lowest pr\cea. Guar. ----------,... Harbor Blvd. owner call I: wor1an hi 6(2-3514 Eves. 54~ Pr.asld Interest ~ttfy 546-167'2 lnl p. SERVICE DIRECTORY s ..;· MONEY MAKER * -r-CEMENT work, all types. ----------EltVIC! Dll!CTORY cb N t Well located JrOVe in RJWI" lllALE 'White cat. Vic of So job too small. Free est. lnco-Tix 6740 p Film duplex on bea 11 P · lide area. 5 •crea of navels Qor'CIOll del Mar. 6TJ.83<8 uo _,c: .... -129.800. Bu,y DOW! Pocket --·ctiorl IL STtJn.liX .no-av.... ---------~ I um bing 6'90 aummer rents! $7469 comlna Into Ml ., • .,.... mORYK CONCRETE Long Fed. le State S9 & $4 next year. Maintained by 640l NO JOB TOO SMALL Your home. Sale-Prof'I REP PASADENA Units' return& local resident. Full price _L°"--------__ ... 1. ,. .... .,...1675 c.c16 842-1010, 646-91B8, ~ 5240 PLUMBING AIRS REMODEL &U-3128 18"'-on n .ooo ln•tst or wlll S35 000 n.....-'d OK with r '"" ... ...,...u.;n ~ ·-------BAY View! 2 BR., carp., drapee, bltna .. pool. M Yearly ~3690 -,., .,, ' · .-n:..,... Lost • Ul' UP"'"' Arch Lon F-' •-St t $9 & ~ trd for CdM prop, 673-2596 t•rm1 to suit. For more info r~ g ""· "" a e ~ "' Beach Heights "Miramar" Contra~ 6620 Your home. Safe-Prof'I •--pleaae call K. W. Small T mo. male Lilac Point --------968-3403 548-8668 842·1010 .-. Ing 6960 Trailer Parks 6055 with: Siamese. Heartbroktn tod-• ROOM ADDmONS • : ... : VE NDOME -=Coron===• d=tl=Ma=r =5250= Patented Mlnlng Claim 30 Acrea, some fnlatage· on U.S. 395. Xlnt motel site. $10,000 Eckhoff and Astoe. Inc. dler family. Reward-Dr. t,. T. Conatrurtlon Income Tu 1318 W, Oapman Ave. lignor ..... 4~ family rooms, kitchen or Alterationa-642..5145 eat, aceuratt, 20 yrs. up 6740 N • ~· SPECIAL! 7 ... ~2 WKS FltEI RENT • -:-~ .... naervaUona NOW !;.: '·N.wly R.decorated : Close to ahopplftf, Parle :-Chlb I Glrlt Club :~-,It Spacious 3 Br's · 2 Ba J ;-Swlrn Pool • PuVgreen •. ·· • P'rpl Jndlyllndry fac'll ~.-;: Multi A Family a.reaa · 1145 AneMlm AV9. iC.M. 642-282-4 * Ch1nnel Reel * APARTMENTS SPECTACULAR VIEW WaterlronVLoc • Boat Slips A va.llable 2 BR . 2 Bath Apts. LEASE • or· BUY $420. Mo. A op • S:SS,500 1lP 2525 Ocean Blvd., CdM fi73.l'm -for further info Oran&e. CalU. LOST ~ yr okl Dachlhund. units. Single story or 2: Taxpayers Attn!! 541·2621 Eve-wknda, 538·5rrt t brwn 1 1 plan1 custom dealilled· For , . llgh ma e, v c est1m11tes I: layout. phone: From now tll mldl'l1ght -OR -Ml.!aion Dr, CM. Reward, • 847_1511 • April 15th, our otffoe will he TRAILER PARK · 26 Spaces 6200 oo quectionl. 54&-9047 open from 8 a.m.-10 p.m. lo on Hwy 80 btwn San Diego Acrtag• Bl.ACX Labrador Ma.le allp Addltlona * Re~eltng do )'OW' tax returns. No ap- 1: El Centro, min area. TO SE'ITLE ESTATE chaln chollar. Vic l6th Pl & Fred H. Gerwlck, Lie. pointment necessary. how· Div~ce forces ~· Write VACANT LAND TUltln Ave. C.M. Friday. 613-6041 * 649-7l70 ever. a call NOW will re- Agt: PO Box 1916, Cotta 2 1/3 acres commercial ion· Valu-'>le reg. dog. Reward. 1erve a tlme for you. Mesa SCS-3632 e d c . 2 o n m a j o r Ple&R S 4 8 -8 2 O 7 or Ca'fMlt CIMnlng 662S 20 yra tax expcr with no m1s- t.horou&hf•re ln Santa Ana. £73-4510 • WAU. TO WALL • filed returns or penalties for Motel, apt.a., busineu or YELLOW.COLD ladies watch • CARPET CLEANING • our clients. Same day ser-Butinffl Rent1I 6060 :>ther commercial OK. or vie Alpha Beta. Wedding BIG Discount! 646-3780 vice. bold for future Increase in gilt 3.1 yrs ago. Sentimental. Coast Business Service value when Bolaa Ave fully p•---•. Rwd. <UO '"""'. • 1670 Santa Ana Ave. -.,. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-!!l!!l!!J!!!!!!!!!!ll!I Herman Trot1, Mgr. RENT ==!!!!!!!!!!!!!~=-::' Prestige Store J bomt Furnftvre _ _ $25 Month . ,; i ~ OP110N TO BUY No del)nlllt 0.1.e. •'-H.F.R.C. f "frnltur• Rtnt•I• W. 19th. C.M. 543-1454 ;·''a;. Meu 5100 ' e ~· MARTINl9UE GARDEN APTS. . ..,:; , ,,. .• Parltllke IUJ"fOUndlnp ' i.t '..ll'URNlSHED BACHELORS UNFlTRN 1 BR ·2 BR · 3 BR ;;:-:· 2 betha a~allable -~. ·~Carpets, drapea, rarage = ·11th & Santa Ana, C.M. 646.wl 646-&>4'1 NEWLY PAINTED- 2 BR w/pr · f~. priv. : _ Pado. Water pa.Id. • 5 ; Gardener maintained. t 2228 "B" P1acentla Av. $100 ~ 2192 "C" Placentia Av. S1lO : ,. . C'Pleue look It then call r. .... s.n-031MI . -~~ :'" $110. ;. · nb bed.rooms, Upttllrl. :;) ~ t.thl, au,,ea. drlpet. ! i Private paUo, praie. ; WALLACE AVE. \TIU.AS -·D Walla~ Ave., CM t IOUth c-J Hamilton St.) ~ Maple Capri :_\pAC 2 A 3 BR, 1~ bat.hi l Q>b. drJll, 2 poola Meer lhp'a and arhoola FROM $99.50 Mgr. 18 N~. #S Silver CHte Apt.. DU Bach Apt. wlUY rm Bdrm kitchen A ba. 1 A 2 BR A,pb. J BR Apt w/3 bL Nr 8dll8 I twys ID wal1o i. dt.t af occ. • El Camlllo, Apt. 1, CM --.._ •• YID. .-~!r:~ ON TEN ACRl.3 l • 2 BR, Fun 6 Unfunl Frplcs I Pri/Patloa I Pools Tennla • Cootnt1 Bkfst 9 hole Putt/Gl'ft'A. gai Su La>e, CdM 644-2611 fNac>.rthar ar. Coat HwyJ Balboa 5300 * UNFURN 2 BR apt new bay &: ocean. $100 per mo. Ye&rly g~ * Huntington IHch 5400 FURNISHED- UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom, 2 baths studio. carpets, drapes, built-int. 1 block to 5 Points Center. From $125. per mo. Key at 7681 Ellis Apt. B. or 84U303 2 Bdrm Unfurn & Bachelor U till ties Included. Near !bopping. 802 Knoxville. Apt. D. HB ~291' 2 bR DupleJC. Pool. Privacy. cpts, dTJ16. 1-st:Y. gar, like new. $130. A•all A Pr 10th. 842~ NEW 1 bdnn apt, frpl, ww cptl, uocedo blt·lns, cirps, pvt patio A )'Cf, pr. S125 847-5306 2 A 3 Bdnn 2 ba Poot Patio. M 0 RA KAl, 1181 Garfield. PTt 1treet 1 blk N. off Garfield. 9i2.a4 1n prime location. A.Ir' cond; BO+ aq ft. See at 1801 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa OR PHONE MR. WARD 642.MU •ian bl d --= .,..,...,,.., Ca..-t Laying • develops Into .. e v · S' • ur-CC<r m-'e ,.., lt. tan • ..-R 6626 Suite E or rill &U-4535 ...ewer line stubbed at p~ .uu~ ., ...., •pair perty. Ample water 111pply. w/blk.; approx. lO moc; INS'IALLATIONS, Smiley Tax Service Drlve by 4n7 w. Bolla, Sun., vie. E. Ocean Blv.. repairs, 9533 Bal n -~ "'"" ~tch, aaleL Aptl our ... __ phone owner 542-. . ncW. Vl.ro>U~ ""' Do (Sul·-206) NB ..,.·,.,,~·.:........--=:-:-:--==-=:"::~ ------,........,.........,-specialty. Reuonable. ""' ver, u: MONEY MAKING GROVE LOST: white, female Huaky, DIA.MONO. ~ 1884 Placentia, Costa Men Eleven aett9 within dty of vie. WH.lialm I Gerfleld 2408 Margam, Npt. Bch 2115 Harbor, CM San Juan Capistrano. Prime •J'ft. Hunt. Bch. Reward. Electrical 6640 w. A. SMILEY c. P. A. development property. All 53&-8361 ---------1 Free Est. Fees 64&-9668 Modern Store 1200 aq ft, am· pie. perkinc. Jn I: out on 2 streets. Petitte, 548-c62l si.~ ALL to large Comm office IUites for rent ln Costa Meta. 642-1040 or Eves. 548- 2841 •PRIME Retail Location • STORE: · 1& x 40 1875 Harbor, CM 646--6654 Offl~ Rental 6070 utilities. $2000 per acre TINY bladt Poodle, needa ELECl'RlCIAN. Llcenaed & G B HOFFMAN under market value at medical recent surgery Y1c b o n d t d • Small jobs, Enrolled •10 practice bef~ $150.000. $S2,500 e q u It Y. HIDcn!lt Rwd. 545-7831 ma.lnten. • repairs. 548-5203 Internal Revenue Service Consider trades. Prepaid 21 in P I ... -.. ... .... " For App't. ~54 NEwEU. ASSOCIATES erton• ' ~ Gardening vvvv YOUR HOME by APPT. 494-6594 COME In tor your tree ANTHONY'S Federal &: State Returns lipstick of your color choice Garden Service • 531-0000 • ::>r1n9• County Retreat 33.7 ac. $1500 per acre Submit terms llanfa atalty & try our ~rreahing mint mask with honey Is almondt 646-1941 & our strawberry rrappe Reas. monthly care. Pron-Janitorial 6790 cleanser. Would you believe lr\&. Landscaping. Exp. bor-FORGET The fuss & leave we're not ln the lor crum ticulturist. "Tender, l~~g the cleaning to us. Fin., bUlinealJ J"ountaln ol Youth ca.re for Green Gardena · windows, carp., etc. Reas. 642-0560 or 962-3936 1416 So. Cout Hwy, Laiuna Lawn & Yard Call Brighter Side 5434134 LAGUNA BEACH • READY TO BUILD • &acb. Located ln the new Deak apace• available ln 10 ac or leu zoned for apts addition ol. the Art Center. UplcHp Landiu pln9 newest oUlce building al or 4-plexe~. city of Onr. 2 GOLFERS for founomt, rototll, grade. ~8206 prime location In downtown JOHN CONLEY. BKR. 1.>AYNOR'S LANDSCAPING Lquna Beach. Air condl· 541.s«iO ~~.':1!.~-ric, ~.:m~e:. Japanese Garde.~~ a: GARDENING SERVICE __ _, _.. be.a tlful -......... ~ Ex-• .. complete ,..,_. s u eel tTI:tr tiuucu, carpet....,. u 10 A~-s. So. CaUt. S8 Down, ft-<. 85 to 95 abootera. ~ ,,... tale Cf'l\S COil • ed _ _.,tlonin T •• o ..... rn:• ~rvlce. Frtt esUmates R· '"'d ti-' ''Amm--·a1 panel p ... u g. -S8 per mo., S795 full price. 1459 ... ~ en ., · "" ...... 1 entrances: rear leada ro 1... Shewfelt, 3216 W. 3rd St.. • 548-'IB • Frtft est-No job too bl&! Municipal parking lots. $50 L.A. Phone 213: 623-5102 TRANSFERJ\ED Abroad will SlO mo up, wkly rain. Mow-893-3581 per month for sptce. Add i.eU membenhlp Balboa Ing, edgin&, cleanup. F.d's SOIL PROBLEMS? SS for desk and chairs. Add lO ACRES, Kirby, Oregon Ba,y Club. Pleaae write Box Girdtning. Free est. 846-We have the ANSWERS &t $10 for buatneu boors an-$850 Per Ac.: 2!% Down M-80 Daily Pllot 5289 ORANGE COAST NURSERY swerinr service. All utilities 546-0741 SINCERE gentleman, 35, like Mowing. Edging • Gardenln& 380 w. WILSON ST. pakl except telephone. 621 O to meet llldp 21~; compan-Sprinkler Repair Costa Mesa 646-3996 DAILY PILOT Mount. & '> ... rt ionshlp. Exchange photos. 847-9558 --1 222 FOREST AVENUE 5 ACRES -aubdlvlsion, Sil· Dally Pilot, Box M-86. MOWING, Edging, vacalawn. Paperhanging LAG~A~EACH ver Valley -18 mUt6 Eut ALCOHOUCS Anonymo111 Gen'! cleanup. Haulin&-P1lntlng ...,.... oi Bantow. "Land cl. Harbor Atte. PhnM 673-1724 )obs * 548-6955 __ ......, _____ _ NEWPORT ART CENTER. Lakea", 80 man.me.de lakes P.O. Box 1223 eocta Me111.. Odd . ISTERIOR &: ext palntlna. 2400 W. a.at "ll&bway. in aru. JJtaUa, fish m. FOR Sale Charter Mem-CUT A: Edie vwn. Main· Prlcea .tubed for aprlng N....,..,..rt, llCll'Oll from t h e ln", -tional, m•..., de-lenance. Llcemed. ~ cltan • up. Free eet 30 yr ~~..... • '"'""~-_, bt-rshlp in Ne.,rt Beach 54&-3570 aft ' PM ~·s-5314 Stutt Sh!."1· Presti1e mod-velopments ln progreas. Tennil Club. '650. 6?3-7814 • exp. Call Chuck at "'' em bl.lildlr\&. Well maintain· Call owner 847.e&40 alt. 6 EXPERT Japaneae Gard~n-IJllT'E'RIOR le ext painting. ed. Attnctlve architecture. p.m. Weekends anytime. Announcementt 6410 tr Lndac'ing, Cleanup, Main-Prices slashed for spring l!'l'Om 300 IQ· ft. up. Utm. Alk for Lee. tenMce. "MACK" 847.ot32 clean • up. Free est. 30 yr tin paJd. Off ttree'. prtvate DREAM Cabin & 2•1~ ac. Coast Healtll Club JAPANESE GARDENER el(J>. Call Oluck at 5'48·5.TI4 6110 6850 10' parking. Heavy coustroo-.rith beau view. $325 down Maintenance by the month. INTERIOR • EXTERIOR Santa Ana tioD for quletne.ss. lndlvldoftl and only S30 per mo tAket • FR.EE &AUNA • Good ttfl. Exper 546-1758 Av& 3 Br extB. 2 colors, VOLTAIRE ~:r:~na -~~!oo~n! ~ NC1M' RLTY ~ ~i~~'!:csm:.::.:.>' EXPERIENCED Gardener $165 642-7528 ~ P'ROM $99.50 call 543-2400 or 544-8672_:__ OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK * t.andtcaplnr • Cleanup * INTER or Ext. PAINTING. r -l BR. 2 BR. Studios h 6"_." 9 am-10 prb Rea1. I: Reliable. ~ IMMEO. SERVICE. Local H~nt bltnl, refril. fll.n . c:arpetl, drapes, ellt· R. E. Wanted ..._ 132 E. 18th St. 642·S<IO • JAPANESE CARDENlNG ref. FREE est. 548-1677 ...... tnc. llir cond, and udlltiea ., __ _,_ Oeanup, Landc1p-• p •~G • Jnt·n·-6 cpl.a, dJ'PI, pvt pauv. a.re loclll!ed 1ti our \oW, low 3 or 4 BR + pool, Not over .,..,-.,.""'" AU .. ,,. L .,. poot. rec:rdtlon area. rent. Ott~ perldng for 10 yn okf. vi-oeceaary. Fun•ral1 6411 lnl· 5.11-7034 aft 7 ,.m. Exterior. f'ree esUm.ates. m S. Fairview Rd. 54T·T«i te'lantL Balldlng IOC1lted In Cameo Shorts or Harbor Mowfng, Edging, Spray· R.e...,._ble rates. 646-301S (Btwn McJ'addee a ht St.I mOlt convenient ~ of View Hilla. 155,000 to WESTMINSTER Ing Fertllldn9. 962·7'49 PAINTING -any room~. a.ta Mesa. For Info Stt at '90.000. Prtnctpala 0 n 1 Y • ' . We use "Sindllir" paints. l8tuna e.ach s~ lS'l'O Santa Ana A~. (2U) 190-17'!12 MEMORIAL PARK o.nent Senfeel 6612 Neat won. Rers. 847-m8 ~ 2 I l 81'.. l~ batN 100 CLIFF DRIVE &lite E or eaU 942"'4535 PRIVATE PARTY Mortuary I C9tMttry P"lntln•, Plumblns. Cal'-PAIN'11NGCal ~ ...... A P00U -ff_D_ Wanta Sor more BR home C I_. a..-.. ft • t..u $:15 J after ._.._ WX\JR'f J'UM/UNFU1lN 1741 w .. tcll r. omp ..-e "-ra pentf)I. Rfu! Rel. lnlQred. ruv room. · Neer ....,,... 1 acboo1L l'w11 Lew. l A 2 BR PTime loc for Corp Ofc'1 with •dJoU\lnc ruest hou1e f,..,. U45 &nMmer1card OK 4 pm. !148-1894 p....,. $HO. 6 ShoPI 3000 -. ft. Wal/pan'I, Pvt or COIUi't· Rr ply 10 p O. Ce-leh C.U "Mi.kt" 642..Q348 FTRST CLASS Painting It Mgr. 2214 Coll~e #2 atepe '° !lhcn .... Box 1561. Long Beach, ~t ........... r ~ MISSION MANoR-~:,:: ~ = ~tow °':i:1'°~; BUSI NISS •IMI fllclud~~~t Cart Hauling 6730 ~"'.'°'~E Deluxe t1.r 2 BR $140 mo.. .... ,.. LW1U11 SUlte 100/1400 aq n. FINANCIAL En.t)'thlnc ID CIDt be9utlful HAULING + GENERAL PAINTING A Pape.rt\anfVli· Ntw~ ckecnted, Jllcely JM. ======-==::;=: Co.op Bkn. Owner ~ place meant a.. ClOlt. Q..EANUP Rcu, .,.., clD. 25 yn up. IQPd.. Ai. 1 bl bn Bache-OFJ'ICE!I: 181 &. 1fih SL, .... ntt• 6300 No traUlc V:b!•1 You. aarne lt -I lllu1 It ~-l'p!Letl 642·~ -+-l-lllrillri-1-ttlll•ltd: __ _. ... ..,l.Jr.,.+.;.;;.;,.;.;.;......;_~~~~"':= h:::::C:::.m~-..,.,. ... r-.il'IW'lm....,.._-...1..._-----t -ntlOfBel .. WW!i""*' l\au. .,,_ .Jo1a.. ~ !~=~~~~~= ""~·LGB 1 ..i-a.:-~::tltii~Miil~iiC"U::a:il5iif:~~w111t ~ -.xzl -. Ii IM ==+~~~;;;;::;:..~~~ apt DOW "ti~ 1ttb Oft\J, ~ 11... wttY ~ Jlrfm-.-ioc. I HAULING. Trult JRIVp.1---0:0.---.----'f--1••-"'•"'~aMm ~.,.,--.mt~ RWL_ ·~ -uiia~ltiOrtitaftlt 1'\1mJnlnr, AtolhiA&;ft do LEAD? a.a ot waf8' elii> =:.. ~ Mm-. MIJ'. SU. afbr, .... Dr.~ ~ Co.. Ont ~ ...,, 11Ml•, .... 115-19 ~....., Leh .. 1. tt all. Elqlert nrll. SCS.2'112 troel0lll1 Jocated =-ce- TILE, Ceramic 6974 * Verne, the Tile Man * CU1L work. lnatall A repairs. No Job too small. Plaster patch. Leaking ahower repair. 847·1957 /846~206 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Job Want9CI, Men 7000 ---EXPERIENCED Man aeeJc. Ing design I development/ mgmt position w/lnjectJon or RIP plHUcs ti.rm. Mi&bt inv. 644-2902 3-lOam Skipper/Engineer Boat Maintenance, Full or 1*11 time. P. O. Box 10'1 . C.M. 548·3561 Job Wanted, Lady 7020 SCR AM-LE TS ANSWERS ~SWERS Lotion -Apart -G r oup -Amoullt -AUTOMA· TION. Over . burden«i bouaewUe to neighbor: "'SorfteUmes I wouldn't mind betng re- placed by Atrl'OMATION." CARPET Cleaning. noor stripplnJ. Wufng, Walls, Windows n 1hed. 531-«£1 Domestic Help 7035 LIVE INS Employer paya fees Cieor&e Byl.l.nd Aaency 106 B E. 16th, S.A. sn~ Otine:se • E:ngllab • French Permanent, exper. Uve-in Frr Eut Agcy. 642-8703 Help W1nted, Men 1200 BOYS 10 -14 Good rou1MI • Good prallt! BALBOA P,:NINSULA DAILY PILOT • t42-432l • -----FOR!IGN EMPLOYMENT· More tha.n 100 countrlea Ir 200 )ob claaiflcationl. Coup- Jes OK. Write P.O. Box 2217, Oran1e. 921667. SeTvlre Station SALESMAN Full time. Good aala17 + benefit& Exptr. ONLY •P- pl)-. JlM TICE CHEVRON 2590 Newport BlYCL, CM. ROUTF.S AVAn .. uu,i: Ill Wettmlrwter tor bo7'1 10.14 Good Profltl • No s.dt.1 Del1v"1 ta-ml JCJTCHEN HELPER • rRY COOK. Collelt' ltla6tnt noon to 5 p,m. 6 days. App I y Hamburttr Hfnl')', 2136 Placd\11&. (l)fta )tea, bal Ettate Sat.man WANTED. We wW train. Call Y\Uq1 Real blat• -m.4CTl or eeClOS xm 8MM ... •• 21. lllbt ll!edl =· u ... atatilft. m ~ ~ NB • w. c.w. Apt 1 CM. WAHTED .1llM l5 Clll Iona LlrgLfVleNaOsmQUiUl ......... s Gtrr .. tar ule; ~ 2 ,.~ Lflfa,. ... Pac SA\'g MONEY * Mon JOU ... t. bi.cstop. pound ' • SKO!XAH J&ut J bOGM '°'"I ...____.. .... ~ '"'-"'"•-t• 'J'akt it-~ tba.dmnp calJ ~ ....... UJ place. l~ ~ ' -.U _. -.u.. View Mf'lftCllNI ft. '11t1 011 Mf.f111 or Mt.-..-wfr'f4, Watt!' 1!llet dean E:xpmencecl r 1'o cbJ6oa i1t pm. lIJll lllo. C.f:M. Gfft .,,,_ cs.. NEVER SETS sm> . ..._ d..t Mar Plot. Mab C!Otr. cJun ;s:7re-n mtored. Pvt. Ollm't-,.S. H-119 X1nt rel. 59-1010 THE SUN °" L.\WN Nowft' &bop or tn.-CbntKI OW'IJW: Mom V1a YARD « cvaP ._ CAlJ. "LEAD'' 60.aMI i..-. l1IDm. wan 1111 ..a r ,um,y or 4 + dos ftllb ~rot _ -~ ~ :;:: •rnt«y. ie z. nth It.. &bo. Palm ...._ ea. tru11 baunic. 5 ~ -~ BankAmtl'lcatd OK ...._ JloCl. Npt Hltl aft& 213 8Jt rd -· • '"' Oltla Mta MU\00 9'2262 Call R1111e a.ft '"".._,, J -. ~· hie/apt. rrl1 ... 5ff.77. u. dodr. d1al M2"5m. i llttlif WOOilU'I lbOa- rJ5.2llO. Mn. Je.ffm e LANOSCAPINO e ~7' bet 6:30A1:30 p..m • • 1 , s.vttel YG'lll( mtll wftb mecbanlcal a p l I t u d e wanted to fill trainee P>' altlons 11 Plutic P'"9 Operator. NIPt ~ ':30 to l A.M. Pte.. a"91 y lll Pf l"IOO to Newport Instrument .Corp. 193 V(. 16th St. Newport IMch An equal opportunJfY employer PART TIME Help needed now Ideal pui time job woridni S nlihtll a week fTOm S to t:30 p.m. Pl)' l'lll\its .iart frOm $230. per motllh No eiq>erience necee- sary. We need nine ~ tra mea now. MOit ha .. lived in this attS two yean or longer. Call for appololment. Mr. Nelson JE 7-2381 Afl Types FIBERGWS LA.MlNATING PERSONNEL TOP MONEY Chopper Mm, &11~ Mokl M•fntfN!JQ; FIBfRFAB 2365 Lafayette, Senta Cara. Calif. !rJ«iO U&-2lll00 75 ' MEN L a r g e, expanding chain now taking ap- plications. No expetj· ence necessary. Age 19 • 35; have Calif. driver's 1 I c e n 11 e & know Orange County area. $3.45 HR·. Mr. Hurti 774-2021 DISHWASHER Morning 4 Greet opportunity for am- bltioua Y'OIJDI man. Apply tn Jler1IOD between 2 and 5 p.m.. dlllly. Snack Shop 2305 E. Coaat Hwy. Corona del Mar c Sal .. "*' A Mlftal9rt arwr opporty with lndllw arm oftertna over 100 nm-- tual flmdl, FUil or pt ttme. No aper oec, we tndn. Npt Bcb otl!ce, 6G~ Santa Ana amoe, sn.am 1nvnton Financial ~Inc. s AL E SM AN For con- !ectlooary i t e m s • to re.bl:llers & coneealonalra Wages will tnauae u aale. increue: good potential tor right man.. Muat bave storage tpace («lO eq. ft.) for mercbandlle. Box M-74 Dally Pilot Experienced Plumber brls Plumbing 1526 Newport Blvd, CM Salea Openin& Ret1 Eatate S1lesman or Broker Oppor1unlty for .2 peop14 Call for appt. Mr. Martin CORBIN·MARTIN REALTORS 615-ta2 llRY COOKS Need 4 elq>el'. men !Or MW mod. co&. ... ~ MUil tie tut. reliabk. ~· sal. Apply i-4 p.m. AMIGOS RESTAURANT Cl E. l'71h, a.ta M~ No Experience .. ecellCU'Y. Must have deM caUb* ctmuw record. Appty YILlOW CAB CO. _m JC. Jldt It. I ~M-1 Car Wash~ fllull time or Min aie 11. aW1 .. LIDO CAA WASH 4S1 E. 17th Oolta EXPllllNCID 14 DAllY Pll.OT ri..dlr. A,rff 9, 1961 J08S a IMPLOYMIHtJOeS 6 ~--owMAN• JOaS' ~OYMINTJOIS' fM"-0\'M!NT J08S A ~OYMINT , ------~~------------------------1---------------------~--~-------Help W•"~ .. 7200Hel, Wanted .... 7'200 "-''• Wanted. MM noo .... w ........ Men 7200 Help Wa"'-1 Womert I I 8 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I WORK AND SHOP CLOSE TO HOME! Have you noticed the clHn little food markeh popping up 111 over Orange County 1 They cen best be reeo9ni1ed by the big clod out in front which en· nounces they art TIC TOC MAR- KETS. TIC TOC stands for fest serv· ice -"seconds in and seconds out." More end more people ere discover- ing the real convenience of 4:>.in9 able to drop into their neighborhood TIC TOC for practically any Item they can get in the giant supermarkeh -ind there are no long distance hikes from the perking lot and no slow tints 1t the checl: stand. Would you like to work FULL TIME or PART TIME in one of theJe smart lit- tle markeh7 If you Ire between 25 end 50, have good hea~h. and art a rHI self starter, wt would like to talk with you. ' NEED EXTRA MONEY? Join t.be-team at MacDonalds lf you enjoy working with a congen1al crew. are physically tit. neat & are wUUng to do your share. Stop in at MacDon- ald's, 16866 Beach Blvd., Hunt- ington Beach between the hours of 2 & 5 P.M .• Mon. thru Fri. We nHd part time M•naaement help, 11 yHrs min. •t Sl.60 + per hr. to start. Alto we need .,.rt time workers for evening. ilL I BUSBOYS Local manuf adurer has Need 2 f~ dBy &hilt. Must lmmedi1te openlnp for: be fut. oeat. 1:. reliable. Apply 2--4 p. m. daily. • Electronic Assemblers • Wiremen We .,.. 1n est1bli1hed comrnercl1I firm with llbtr•I fringe benefltt. ONLY EXPER IENCED PEOPLE should apply to P ARAMETRICS 929 laker Str .. t Coste Mesa 549-2221 AMIGOS lEST AU RANT 428 E. 17th, Olrsta Mesa Exec Secretaries For pl'l'Sid~nts of 2 -Uni companies. Prime positions. AppUCMt must possess ad· ministrative ablJJtiea; have well roundtd background in industry. Good skill.a, of coune. Prefer late ~·· to 40. To '600. lfee paJd) NEWPORT Personnel A .. ncy 133 Dover Dr., N.I. 642-3170 SCREElllD C1r .. rt for Secys. & Bkprt.. lft Orange County 642-7484 ~ Screened Personnel Agency 901 Dover Dr., Newport Bch. 7400 -··----- ASBllW Ea.ctrenlc CompoMntt Tbe9e opcilQp require 8 rnonthl Neft)t C!XPf!rlt'nct ln ~ componmt U8t'mb')' Ollmltion.5. To quallt)' YoU must knoW color cod1na a n d band toldul.ac tedlnlques.. VISIT .. DANA liborltories, Inc. 2401 Campus Or. Irvine, Calif. (Near Oranae Co. Airport) An equal Ol)pe>rtunity employer Re pro Typists To tra.iD on IBM MT/SI' tYPeWriter. Type 65 wpm. One tor night shitt. one fM day ahift. Manlllll Communiclfions 2230 S. Anne St. Santa An1, Callf. Alt equal opportunlzy employer ·------· ANNOUNCING New REUBEN'S & coco:s 1555 W •· Adams (At tf arbor) Costa Mesa Now interviewing for: • Waitresses • Dishwashers •Busboys •Cooks Apply in person Betwffn 8 and 4 p.m. 1555 W. Adams, Costa Mesa • • UO ,..,...MMING INDUS. DUll'TINO GltOC. CHICKINO 'TRONrc ASSIMIL Y PIX/TYP LIFETIME Gilt· Oillcoat 10 lesaon TypiJlc ScboO& 173 ~J Mar. CM. 5'8-2859 Mon-Wed. REnUGmA'IUll .. r1 N FNi l«>TPOINT •• ~ 2-0r Auto~· $199 CASH OR Make P~ta ol $2 w• MERCHANDISE FOR 117'7 Had>or Bl•d., C.Pit; SALE AHO TRADE Open tll 9 p.m. Furniture IOOO -iiiW GAS DlYElf* WAS $111 ~·1 FURNITURE 2 Lett et $149 CA4., OR •· Returned from p of decorator atucllot aymenb $l.l6 ~ h 117'7 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Sp1nls MtdlterraftMn ,_ til 9 ... ALL NEW ""l"'C'• p.m. Must S.crlfice $615 RENT OR BUY · ; WAS ORIG. $1698. Neow automatic Tt'Uber" S2 Week • ITEMS AS FOLLOWS: t'OLOR KING TV '- Gor&eous 8 ft. Spanish aofa OPEN 7 DAYS _ a.od Match In Ir OWr. S39-9531 193-ldtl CUstom q u 11 te d with • carved Wood trim. R. 10 tt. WASHERS S29.95; dryers Seville Car-red velvet aofa. $35; F"tteurs $'15; ~ •• heavy OU'f[ oak end tables cowertone le A•oc.; CU-.: and m&tcbinc cocktail tr 540-l095 • :~ Ne. a Piece Kine me Med-UPRIGHT Freezer. 22 eu:'i; 112.1'raDeU cu pueBed x1nt ocod. Sl25. bedroom 1U1t.e with ~ Aft. g PM • wkmck -7° Klnr me boX sprtnp 1c mattreu. Laree Spanllb de-Anttques llJ~ cor dhrlnc room. Gold leaf W aJ,. Spani&b table lamps. Han&-ANTED FOR CASI"(" Help Wanted tnr nae lamps, etc., etc. OR ON CONSIGNMENj,., Jobe Men, Wom. 7500 Each piece can be purcm. Antique.old Pieces 6 ' ed indMdu.aUy. Art Itenu-CoDectiooa _ Women 7400 M'GOO'S Need Rinky-tink Terms &vaila_ble Stamps-Coina Si.ng-a-lon_g. Piano P~er Newcom.era to ca11l AUCTl.ON & SHOW Opportunities for r1pid •dvoncement In this young pr09ressiv• orgenixa- tion m1k1 this more t+ian just • job-a can be 1 carMr fuR of challenging stimulating experiences. Take a few momenh now to ceU our personnel department for more information end en interview appointment. Employ· ment available inJn1ny 1r-ea.s near the Orange Coast. 1- Dishwas6ers Busboys COSTA MESA AREA Med Recpt, It type ...• SJ'!S Fr Ot6oe IM.DJ ...... $425 &.lpvr /Nunery sch! •• -• S346 Aasmb/wire &: aold'r •• $2.60 J. R. Pi~ Assoc. Agff!C)' 1882 Newport, C.M. 642-6720 \VOMDJ • MEN' T:Eln>HONE SAL~ Permanent Part-Time Wort< near home in our new Costa Mesa newspaper circuJ.ation Salrs facilities. Employment ptfered t o persons 18 to 64. We will train you. G u a r a o t e e d waizes & commiuloo CALL NOW! Applications Bein9 TAKEN Call 642-1831 for appt. Cl'edlt approved immediately SATURDAY, APRIL 15th R & D FURNITURE thru SUNDAY, APRIL 2bt· However even if you're not looking for a job right now we hope you'll come into any of our markets end just look around. TIC TOC MARKETS 642-5921 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I PROOUCTION TRAINEES No experience necessary. 18 to S5 years. High school graduate. If you have the aptitude, we will train you. Permanent employment. Ex- cellent opportunity for advancement. INTERVIEWS MON. THRU FRI. SPS Western 2701 So. Harbor, S.nt1 Ana An equal opportunity employer PRESS OPERATORS Rubber experience only. Night thlft. Apply P.rsonnel Office U.S. DIVERS CO. 3323 W. W1rrter Avt. S1nt• An• An equal opportunity employer Aef)UA-AIRE NEW ORANGE t'O BRANCH NOW HIRING TRAINEES NO EXPER NECF..S&UtY St:artlni salary $e mo For interview can 547-0607 • Boat Auemblen and helper • Boat Mechanic With diesel exper. e Fiber9l111 Mold Man JenMn Marine Corp. 235 F\:d1er. Costa MeM Apply in person Coco's Famous Hamburgers 71 Fashion Island Newport Inch Acceptlnt Young Men under 30 Trainift9 positions A major subsidiary of a Ne'l'J York O>J,:>oration will train a select number of young men u asaitanl11 In expMding Southern Cali· fomla chain. Good working houn, exCt!llent profit shar- ing and fringe benelits. Ex- cellent opportunity for ad- vancement for c A r e e r mlndtd men. High school education. Some college prefl'm!d. $135 per wMk salary For pel'llOMl tnter.ifew call 539-1183 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. ARCHITKTURAL SENIOR DRAFTSMAN Thf'ff years experience. Permanent employment. Exceptiooal growth op. portunity [or qualified {>er90fl! Appty in person Will.rd Jordan Architect & Assoclat .. 1500 Adams. Cowts Mesa ~ ANGELES TIMES 1375 Sunflower Ave Col.1a Mesa FULL or PART TIME EMPLOYMENT Permanent only no students Agencies, Men & For eatJmatet It info CAf.U Women 7550 lM4 N""l>Ort Blvd., C..M. Sll-1212 ~ E very night 'lil 9 (713) 598-3338. Aak tor "lhi<t" Age& 20 to 48 -uberal va-Coast cation pay. Merit raises, Sat I: SUn 'til 6 Cataloguing ends April 11\tl. A-OK . --------540-5151 Ext 297 540-0301 empfoye discounts, tive day Employment Fu :...-week. A.pply Monday. Wed-mu ... w • • • Comml .. 1on Galteri• · 7'722 Garden Grove Blvd • Halp Want.d Women BA.R.._"dAIDS. . • • 7400 ... and GO.GO DANCERS S300 per week 638-5483 or 633-9763 nesday, Tb111sday and Fri-AflAncy • . . AppHances dny, 9:30 lo 4:00. ":!I- F. W. Woolworth 642-9611 Color TV's & 2300 Harbor Blvd. 1670 Santa Ana Ave. Stereos Full Charge COSTA MF.SA Costa Me.-AUCTION Five Yelll'I experience. Age SECRETARY Women's BOOKKEEPER - WESTMINSTER • · 96 BEN'JWOOD chain at ~ each, 17 trunks, 5 oak I.ables. 3 rolltop detka, 2 hill aeets. Antiques Ampersantf 2624 Newport Blvd, CM 642-3059 ·" 25 to 40. Good typist. Start-W.d---~ 7 • COOK-Part Time ing salary to S525. Establish.. ~uired for Contract Ad-Division • ,_ay-p.m. e WAITR~Full TUne ministration Department INSPECT E Musical Inst. 1125 Apply in person ed company Newport Beach Minimum 2 years experi-Fff ch1rgecl ANYTIM ----- MF.SA LANEs Send resume to Box M 77 ence in Contract Adminls-File Clerk. 18-35 •••• St. $280 9 A.M .• 9 P.M. GIBSON Elec. guitar. i:tid 1703 Superior, Costa Mesa Daily Pilot. tration. 80 wpm typing, 80 F&ctory worker • · .. $1.65 br Al hollow body; Standel Su_~ WANTED RN'a tor relief 3 ~-------wpm ahortha.nd. Used to Seamstress 2 yrs exp. Pit'C1! ways a Artist XV amplltler; ~ to 11 It u to 1. Apply Pereonnel Counsellor typing technical data. Call work or .... $1.65 hour TREMENDOUS xlnt cond. ~ :·. Huntington Va 11 e Y Con-N__,td 642-2400. or e•es. 546--0319. NCR #"50 ()pr. Exp only s.180 SELECTION · valeacent Hosp., 8 3 8 2 =-to JOlll expenenced ask for Jim Hyams. Servon-Bkpr thru TB .......... S425 Pianos & Organs I~ Newman, HB. professional employment le Division of Gulton Indus-File Oeric. Exp only ... S375 of TOP quality * PIANOS •. ORG•"'s" ...:c agency. Aggressive. iood tries, Inc. 1644 Whittier Ave., Bank Tir. 2 yra exp. · • $350 "' "'' -.-DENTAL Assistant, Laguna on phone. Person selected New & Us.d *Largest stock In so. c~· area. Work 4 days, paid tor will be alert and have M Costa Mesa. An equal 01> New A~ Clerk. Min 2 yrs Furniture & Appliances * ~%-4070 off-Player pl.abOill 5. Wed. Sar. le Sun. oU. interest In working with portunity employeT. ,..._.:;m~ng • .. ·• ·• '11"00' ~ llXXl roU. to choose frotii Wrlte Dally Pilot Box M-82 ~. Sales beckgrotmd SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: \,,AC • ns exp. · · · · ...... WILLIS CLARK'S * Term1 • Terms -Terms i "'-">•.,..... ... , Woman t 0 helpful. but not D«e•.... Sailing Instructor, female on-Secy. SH fl!· type 55-60. To AO K .-Ka '-~~~~·Wed&: SUn eves C1fl 547-9721 _.y. ly. City of Newport Beach. early 30 s ••.... S375 mo. ~fo;i=f~ai:: ,;fdir in the nursery of Central Parks, Beaches & Recrea-Waitr't!S!e. Day or nlte shifts Field 's Wholesale Plano ('ii. Bible etn.iM:h. CM 543-4567 WAIJRl:rfl:f tion Dept. Several years of . Sl.m hr. · • UJU sailing experience required. NUTleS Aid. Exp .•• $1 .65 hr. COMMISSION OALLH'f 12072 Brookhurst at OlaprMn BABYSITTER 2 1 c h o o I With good knowledge of rac-Klt~n Helpn-•••• $286 mo. 7722 Garden Grove ln4) 638-2'ml children. Live-In Pttf. Vic Experienced only• ing skills It 1 ai1 i 0 g Hostess. ~· only ... Sl .75 hr. Garden Grove Blvd. ORGANS &: PIANOS _~ ' Brookhurst & Atlanta II 8 Apply in Pel'10n · 1 Combo Wmtress/Hosten ¥>·Hr West et hKtl IM. R ond M 100 l f"' " 968-24&3 SURF & SIRLOIN termtno <>ID'· $2.09 to $2.54 , ., Ille ..,,.. Grew ,,..,.,, amm . • 1 p n "• per hour. Apply 1TI4 W Sl.65 hr. used, only ~; also ~ BORED Or broke? CaU me collect. Ont.y those avail im- med need apply. Zl3: J7j. 9976 betw 9-11 am. 5930 Pie. Cat. Hwy. HalbGa Bl•d., NB SPANISH Baldwin, Conn, Low r~1" -Newport a .. ch Male Division from $395. L 0 t I of uaeil CLERK • Typist: 2 openings Be F .. hlon·WIM d in ts •· --•-SALESLADY lr. stock brokerage oUice. F .. charged BUT ECONOMIZE ~ 5• •P e • cor~ New OJ>fning for new product Will train. AJ?e 18-27; start Mgmnt trainee. To age 28 pianos. ' EXPER. Drug&: Cosmeuc • n•x: • I ~i..A.~ SCHMTDT-PHIUJPS 00 -•OT' 3 womm over 25. Must ..-.. npp Y w~. after S42S Living Room Set -1 ONLY 1907 N M · Sant& ..,_ Girl: Gundenon Dnlg. 716 have plea.'l8Jlt l'l!COrding 1 PM. Sbennon-Hammill &: Bwtx>y age 18 up ... $1.50 hr. 0 _ $349 NOW S19'J' · am, ==z-~ E . Balboa Blvd., Balboa voice. Car nK'elAl')'. Aver-~.1. 001 Dover Dr., N'pt. Electronics Tech. 2 yrs. solid • .._. · · PIANOS & ORGANS • 673-5370 e age $600 mo. For appoint· Bch. state. .. . • • .. .. '606 mo. Dinette Set - 1 ONLY ALL MAJOR BRANDS: PA RT-TIME Expttlenced ment Call Mr. Famham. Lathe Opt-. Oau B. ·~mo. O.k-top exten table ..,14 NEW & USED · · Douehnut maker. Apply ~21\ 10 AM..f:~ PM. J~n, Wom. 7500 Fae 'l'raintt. 25c hr nu11e 30 v.rrougtit iron c:ha.irs. $69.95. WALLJCH'S.MANNING'S: ~ O' ~nut. 9148 GIRL FRIDAY days, ............ S2 hr MUSIC CITY ·;. urat. . Two inrl office lmmedlate Fry Cook&. May w/exp. Bedroom Set S ~ 1 l-100 So. Bristol . -, OPERA TORS opening Rlr.ltlable experienc-CABINET $24 shift. l.Jgtlt oak. Ree. $229.i . So. Coast Plaza •. Sportswear. Experienctd. ed sharp ~al, P!Haant phone Hosp Orderly. Exp. Sl.6> hr. NOW ONLY $1]9.95! 540-7165 Steady. S80 • S140. 1580 IJ'.'l'50nallty. Mutt be excep. Fae Tt'ainee. 21. m~. 30 CHORD ek!ctrlc con~Ti Monrovia, N.B. 642-2666. tional ~pi,q at lP'lst 75 ASSEMBLERS Fae Tntinee. Services~'!,~· TERMS orpn -°'° trade Jor mia,U EXPER MAID WANTED V.'PJ11, no SIH. ·· • tficta-Appro'led Furniture piano. 548-5620. Steady job. DaY! only. phone. If ri11sll' ·1 1if3. ht I. 2nd Shift R.e!lt M -·-s!..:: hr. 7159 Hartior Blvd .. C.M. BALDWIN Acroeonic P18ll0 SEACREST MOTEL ~ Mobile Home :is gr. •nunee .• ';!...,. U. Dllily S.9, 1~5 Sunday $4.'l'i c11h. Private PartJt . 1661 s. Cout Hy, Laguna SECRETARY--~rlenc• Walter:·~;~~j~-om~ • 548-9660 • ~ .. •WA~. 7 a.m. to 3:30 E Excellent Opportunity It.al. food ..... $1.75 hr. 83 Hamond Organ ,·" p.m .. Sundays oU. Apply xperlenc.d Bellboy. • Over 21. Grave-yard R911tal D.at. with Lealle speaken • Hamburger Henry, 2 1 3 6 Permanent 20 bour S day --Apply-shirt SlOO + ti -r Excel cond ~ PRODUCTION FOREMAN TRAINEE , Traln for a branch manager po«ltion in one of our 600 branch oUice~. Promotion to higher IUJ)el"Vlsory poal- tlona -.--m be detnmined by individual performance. C.ol· lege tninln( or pntctical experience will dt!tennine starting aalary. MARINE CARPENTER Placentia. Costa Mesa w eek pt>sltlon available. l:YftlQMB Sol ..... -• ps. Takes over ENTIRE . Newport Beech, l~U I: 1..J. ""' Kut xboy. ~hr. wk. Sl.65 hr. Home of Chain PRACTICE Piano.~ :: • RELIABLE Seamstress • Top salarv. Write Box M 84 upriaht Excdlent ccnditii* Cabinet Sftop 2nd Shift -Apply- fJPlOllfR MOTORHOME CORP I PACIFIC FINANCE 2'T9'l Harbor Blvd., CM ~ EquAl opportunity employer NURSERYMAN Experienced Daily Pilot MOTl\ftllMft CORP ,.. paid Below cost liquidation ar ms. 54M381. A LaMode Fahions 6TJ..6015 -VIUM"llO , Male Lampe-Table9'Qullted PRJV"...,.A""'TE=:-P=arty--wan-11-_-. tiJ.t TEMP. Gen. Office. Xlnt SALESLADY Ar;y Mgr.~ Ina Pl> '6riO mo Beda:p~Dinetta-sofu tiey piano tor c:uh. 5f3.93a5 Eict>erlande~_!_n conatruc-typlng. l..aiuna HillJ. r 4000 Campus Drl•• Sales mgr tnfneoe. ~ Bedroom.Ma~ .• lion w1uulng ol cab-494-0127 or fine ~~ Ntwport lhach depft ••.••••• '80I) mo. 517 W 19th St C.M. lnetry and panels for m. and sportswear. eont.ct 1rur Aa'enta-Exp or trainees. • ., T•vWen 820.s tuior of one -of -a -kind DENTAL Recpt. Exper Ir Manager. llriO -------;.;;.;;.;.i yachts. P"nmous ~ri-mature. Send resume to Box GENE'S mo. LOVELY Earl y Am. RENT ;. ~e with some fibreo\"ss M-3l Dally Pilot. Hunt!nmon "-ter • Waitress u_ L-I Heywood • Wabfltld din. ., ,.. """'' .-.ny otnwr ltt1-set· 2 "*pt 4 Mt ~ -usef\11. Send letter OT re-C'PF'NING For genenl lac-_Edingrr & Belch Blvd. ··-' "• ·• '· ~ ll!me to tory wor1t. 5 3 6 -6 2 2 1 • i ht H nso. 673-(356 COLOR TV ' Box M 38 Daily POot between 8 AM and 5 PM Major 81nk Wantt N CJ ostess Hn~:m Into ~m~Frt 0::::~=~:77:-::~=pt-,...-ltY'e-_-.dinint--~ .: An equa.1 opportunity MATIJR.E woman 1o 1>t1bys11. E 1~ • • • " • ..,,,e, cas $9 MONTB·,·1·.:; ••• employrr my home; 2 childm\. l lithl. •per Busboys 125; M«1tag w1br SS>. Frzr .. _ NCR 4500 O,.r.tor $50: D-.i-S45 1n--. Experienced nul'lef'Ytnan to agr. n.cf. req. 646-m7 Tll FOREIGN ' .""'.... : ·--. 11 ~ ' worlt tn S yr old retail WAITR.~ • experienced. 494-0 1 Apply Miu Ventura EMPLOYMENT ~ SliO. 646«181 Reft~ ~· ~· " BUSBOY Grnt opportunity tor am. btdoas )'()Uni man. Ap,,ly tn ))fTIOU be~ 2 and 5 p.m. dally. 5ftaclc Shop 2lOS I. Ceaet Hwy. C........ .. M.r nunery. Beach a re a , GARDENER Split 11!1ft. DinMr More than 100 countries l H DROCK Mple. ~ f~~s:dn~~~~ro: FuU lime heed l~T Tel•~,;. ~:ton ·pe~:;Js:=~ ~ Howard JohllSOft'S =~~;~~"~ ;~W.:die~ ~;. sn 1151 .. ? ; an>t 642-22411 wttkdan only SllpeMse and din'ct car· .,..... tim,, bettrt ~ar • v•.-....o t to t:!ID • 7 DAYS I YOUNG MAN to work 40 denln1 of large beach area ~:me :~4 from your 675-2870, Mrs. Jeffen 2750 Harbor Blvd. Onnre. 9211187. -•" hours week. $1'15 week. 20 fticDlty. Resume and refer-SECRETARY·T••1NEE COlfa M... School•htttructlon 7600 Store Equipment 8012 $29.9$ enc.s to Box M 73 Daily LVN Mt d I I '11d -~592 :.: ' to 30 car necesal')'. 544-«i94 PIJ t c n e Fast Typist. avod S.H. req. I' CLASS .tlowcaae m • Aftft' 5 p.rn. 0 ' ll'Mtmcnt~~~m ablft. for HB 1,., omce. Mr. Klnr FOR Snip 'rf Stitch AND UP :. SERVICE Sta.-Atltndant. ra•RIElt IOYS 962-«n.2 • BEAtmCl.AN Booth tor S«retarlal Trafnlnt 3334 £. Coa1t 1:fw1 CdM No u..0-.., ~ . FlllJttrne. Exper ' over 25. -" ·= 5 ~ l l e rt t t e E X p E R I E NC E D rent. ~ CJllPiY! ! ! A TTENI> THE ' "" _, lil'VWW' OppJ ti't Mobile. 8'1rini· GOOD ROUTES F V ~ ~· R.B WORKROOM betp. Mel for f\111 lirlb'IMHae caD Mod Molllrft ~ .............. 0..S. to2G $LOO per ~~ -~?' dafoe A Edinrer H.B. AVAILABLE • · Morrison ~ ll!B-9329 or~ BUSINESS 001.LECE in Ole •• oq --•• ._.. --PART .U-,._!!:"_______ ~L! ~ "~! .. 1 ~ ois:: :f :eftoo Southland. ~-~ ~ MOVJN~ !Mt. ..._ .. ~u ~ ~-~·-~.~~--,!., .. Fl_:_= _ _ _ __;,._1--~-· Fi'=.-• ---•c.n ~ '" ur!Jtll:1vn1_~ ":!t --~_.,..''tlldil ··•-TV~ -·~ Aaetwwt9'-~ -.-t4MH'rdan;-.. --.. • . ~ln. Room a DOeJ"G + .... •tnk 1ii. NB----9991. O-d• .......... _ ~S-Wpm-.. · _.. ltCA COCOlt TV .• ~ .. --• ._. .._, P iea. ntT comt 2 yn txp; 1Uft 1;;;-;vn ur.wv U\J a m. -~ ~ ~ M ,_, ..iary. ~'-61" _..,_, ~ _ DIM ~. E\t..._ ca,.,. M, oar fUiiil J $150 ,'; -; Z.,-"'~ ~~ !?., brW. ~ Colfft Shop ~~ ,.<! TVb • ap. 825 W. 18th 'Cotta Meup.m WOMEN .am a IS boars C'1oE WTD. Malit wont. A Start 8!17 .....,._!'t"mtnl DON'T ~ a n'l1, -Ito 26r' 5Callw.o"' ! ·---,. """'l' _ ... • -• ... w. ...... ._~ ... o c • n I c a l · weielc u 11 ~ Mn. maid wOl'lt for motel mritl. c:taws a11o. ftldr cslb w It wU'Jt"~ fruity Ouar......,_:i.,r : --i{;i! Cout a.ta u.om·s NURSDY-ck,srolmd_n_.cuau_y • ._llAUTitlAM.WAHT.ID ~. 80._ Sldllrf + A~ POCtY",.lUT"" 1'illY nor-.-Df 117TKanw-....,., C.Mi ~ ran ~ ~taU l'ltll"fffl' ~nMMnt. Da.t.Brown applJ lOia G Camino Dr, Of MEDTCAL AlllllMt b a c le e Rl3J'AUR.ANT HELP e BUSJNEM CX>u.ICE IC-tm Open tU t p.m. ':· • ..... • 0..t 11 llJ@l alMnaa. Ex'per. Dltded. C.O. M&-t&84 llND!ltY HIL~ ottJoe """"· ~ t injec> e PART·TIKE e 325 N. Newport Bl .. N.B. Tiiie .-.... ,_ .n nan.. Plkll w-...... ~ ~ l'Mtwtlll1 .. •1 -.1.a a!AR.CEm ~ _..,., ttan..r...i--.ai.11» •56..s • Pllawsa."21 -.... -_ _.. _, .... -· c ..__7 --,,_ ~ ,__ -.llW'QI a o..Oot :.'. , l • ' . ·-' , . . . • f' •• -. . -.. . ._._....,.-,,.....:,C. .,,._ --- MllCHANDlll flGR M11CMAND1S1 Pol ! .aLI AND' TIADI IALI AND TIADI ..... I YIChh 9000 ~U-MOO POOL TAIW In IMAITll ~~ANISH CAatNIT ., z::' ~u:u TO CHAanl , ... , .,.... '9, 1"8 DAILY PILOT l lJ - TIANSPOITATION TU-.OltTATION TUNSPOttTATION TUNSPOITATlcSN rlAMSPOfTATION I TRA ! RTATION-I Trvcka .. l'!e 1!!11 Aut." ffOO Aut.e WantM 9700 Uted ~,.. "°' UMd c.,.. t9GO Used Cars 9'00 15 FORD Ecmdloe, beaVJ TOYOTA IUICK CHEVROLET FORD I ~. Cllllnm ..... low • Slate from -~ ... d.. JOftl' ' ~ van. Wlblt .... ~ Sport C•rs N 101------------- s..c. •t-...... 611/J TOYOTA 681/J MG t fO)tilble lor lamPI • u l'nd ~ $329 val&M ., aa1lbom a to. blu. V • ti b 1 e or DECORATOR ONLY S239J8 lklPS*', II .-UW.,. --------.1'i'b Ma1'le top. darts _,,. FINANCING Cll&ffemll C,,._ ;~ wtCll Fld dllfp. allO SICAltD POOL • WooGll • K11ia wtlll UM vw • .n !~a1*11t.-tlbiilf. ms. Y.abs. ~ Bl:!At.rr. ar Spt.. ,,.... u.. DIPl aoo&a. Ill iQP. Oil landllca})d. vanoua a im PqUJpped tar k1ae 411t. Gat• T1rel. N Al'cralt l~ loo llWDttOU Ult. 10I 9!!!!J!!!!!ll!!!!~!l!!l!!!~l!l!!!!l!!!!Jl!~ AlbacClre and Mar l l n ~ 1114 tldia eurtaba. Lota NOW Hl!l lJ NOW Hl lll Ill THEM TODAY SEE THIM TO~Y ·""'-LlmiA ""'-LIJDiA 'a5 rord Rancbero v /I, " tpd. luc:Qble ~er. IDl&ll um. 548-8091 198! FALCON Omwrtlble I OM owner, RAH, 4 ..-l SactUicel ~ aft. 5. : '61 Ford 4-dr. V8. aooc1 mechanical cond. $25G. 847-0911 !..-0r.rouo.&Maa>ma:DC STIRLING Sil.VER ~.~Gu lntt. cirome. ~ PJOD tn. I•• p.a. All ct.1 6 JM, FlatwMr, aimple, ._ant. C:rulae. Vf't1 cleaa L.B. •ltd. Sell'* TRK 211. I....._ old with &it wortananabip. MIU'irw GaQpQ 14 Sltp aot (ZIJ) 91.a59 1185 aurtior. C.M. 646-S3CO ~ IMPORTS ~ IHPORTS f:;$prin4J CIHnincJ! 10 complete place 1ettlnp, Owner aboard Sat. aad Sun. GOU' ~ 1iCimtd b TO.YOTA 1986 Harbor, C.M. '66 CHMOlET ..,_--1960 Ford V8 l ·h wagon. pt, auto, good Urd. new batry. MOQ. S37-0'l31 t.nc•-t<Jm ~hair. man.y, many extra pieces, 18' GLASPA.R CITATtCl'1 .-u.. m. Eve a .,Of.dr blond with r~. carvtnr tet, etc. Inch.ta 1'5 hp Jobnlca. eom1. CO'ffl'o ..... or da1I M&-O!!a5 _. l'VIUARTERS lena1b $60. nocr $80 tunlab proof dart wood trailer, compu1 IPdmeter, ~ = full *lrttd aqua caa. Private party Will lell Jmac. la water at Newport (,...,.,. 9520 £lMORE MID • ENG~ bAnd con- structed IPol'U ~. OlrvaJr rwr Ira.In, disc brks, alum ikln $WO, Aft 6 pm • 355 Rochester $t. CM MS-3433 4 Door. VB. automatlc traJl5o mission, power steering, rs· I dlo, heater, factory air coo· ---------1 dltlonlng. MERCURY f8ili orJUCb1 prcm ctr.a. for '350. EXACTLY~ price Beach~ :Sttapl•. 11&. Short pink asked at department stores 19• LADD Cab O'llll. 100 tap 11.ANSPOITDS 9825 GAllI>EN GROVE Ill.VD Auto. Wanted 'dreu wtth ~ nYklD lace m.mt evn, all day wkndl. Mere, tilt trlt. Ideal for •uSES.CAMP!IS GARDEN GROVE JE 1-60! ;jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil $1795 "LUXURY UNER" STANSBURY 1~0~}!~1v.a on r lldrt S18. ~ fake UPHOL!TERING • $"19.50, 2 Lake M.ead or Catalina. 'ff VW t J>UI • , fY,.: tllou&ds cape $10. pc (Earopeu ~en) $1.650. Wbdl .., ~ ~ ·-"-'----n.-9 --. '2) WI PAY BUICK P>.RKLANE, BREEZEWAY ·. 6t§..1trlJ J'ree ett, AeJ. ..c..i..-, 215 fT7g ._. ~ -r--\ " ............... "a DelQQ Bua • pul :.Jr AucnoN * Mam, BB ''Bemy'· 53S-M«i ------'Cl .... 9 ....... i U you wtD tell « bey E.UU..Y Am«tcan maple Sailboats 9Q10 : Ii"• Windy • tey , dellt~oue. Exe. <And. --------• · ~ J'rictl'.11 pm. q . $50, -=:tUice SSS. 64&-AU>EN 40' YAWL r Windy's Auction 81m 4!181. Ex:oeGood1i:,111:::. =: • GENUINE Meyers M. a D x. ~bind TCJQ'a Bids. Mat'l Body A puta. Neorer UMCI, ly rdttted A rtdeccntfti. ;::.:..;~ Newport, CM ~ Call 146-&U · Sleeps 1. AlllJDlaum mut. Le!! !~H SS ~:;:a.:_~ ~t~ ~ ~~ 10~ r. ....., 56501 Alk for "Scotty" es. new eftline. Olndltklft 549-0303 -673-1 190 t,'Flsmitur• ,, AppUancet like new. Muat uC'ritice! ""twllOll t i.VD. COSTA M•$A if A;i!tiques ,/ Toola POOL Table -~· 4W x 9', $17,500. By CJllnler. ~ •17 ai.y " ton A 10~' · Ol'f lTEM or -betivy bed, balla, cuea, or 673-57115 Teardrop camper, pwr steer ~COMPLETE HOUSEFUL cover, rack $485. 847-GIJ B-RI-G-. _Squ_ar_e-_Rl_g-. -22-.-. -14 & brks. air. loaded with i Call 547"'748 cc 827.a271 PVl'. pty: 28 yda Mou Salls. 4 cylinder eng. $4200. xtras. Like new. $5100 or ! ·POOL TAILES Grl!«I C8r1Jft. Like new. Sale or Trade. (213) 245-2623 best offer. 962-9645 ~ _ _ TOP N~' Call 96U155 aft 3 P.M. Days (212) GR 2-3142 Eves 9600 ~~·~ . RACING Shock Sabot No. lmoorted Autos . ~m $295. $1190!'!th 1610 4211. White bull, very good ck, Delta, l'tther, Misc. Wanted d 549-0229 ~~mod~~~~~~/ life-WANTED CU'IH~Y RENTALS ii.& Main, ~ 538-00ll * RHOD~ 19's *boa •;.,WE IUY & SELL Fun Zone Boat Co.. Bal lamonds • Gold Purnltur•Applllncet 33• RHODE'.$ SLOOP ·• lqu. & Olcl Jewelry Color TV'......Stereo1 $3100 <Days> 6 7 3 • 5 o o 4 ; ~\IQOlt IJIYthlnl. TRAD~. -TOOLS -(Eves) $.8843 :c:.;.M. Jewelry & Loan 531-1212 ot '93-0555 26' EXCALIBUR· oUer! 1 Of ' · a kind, in N'pt . .213: 793·7480 : 1838 NewPort Blvd.:C.M. (Ask for A tt) ~ 681 JV\A~ • ~ -• 646-7741 • .:;r.= .. ,;:;;;: ==""""=· ===== FURNITURE $tereo com pl DJSHW ASHER !1!!1:!:*!~ !!l !'!!nm~ S.....L_ Skl_8!•!s_ 9<'.>3~ t. ~ NEW HCYI'POINT .,.._ .. ...., ...........,.... ,,..,. c:.:;:...._ ' .. SAVE $50 -14• cu.tom power Cat, tri-hull ~t"tn °" llled as portable. Machinery etc. 8700 75 bl> Evinrude w/trlr. Ex-~i!> or pmtl ol -___ ....,,..____ ceL ·cond. $$0. 494·3332. ! ~-$2.50 WEEK 2000 LB. Hylter f o r k lift, ; Itn Harbor Blvd .. C.M. runs good. Pneumatic, $995. lo.t Slip Mooring 9036 f :. Open til 9 p.m. 752 N. BataVia, Orange. ·· ·---;- "OVING be.ck East must ~2691 or 897~33 W ~NT SLIP for 35 :-sev.,, Houu full of tumlture ETS and LIVESTOCK Yawl. Npt. ~arb'. SJ3..0146 :1~ appliances larp P --WANTED: Side tie for new ;& small. Polytronlca CB n-Peh Gener1I HOO 36' Trimaran. 2· draft. ~ .1ll0. Linear Amplifter / 545-548:1 ~p: A mile. 646-7838. MACAW PARROT ...;;::=====;::;;..:::= $J$iS·. pre.teen a . S.10, a: ElCIOl!l Cond. ~. sz. 10 c~thing: 5#-5794 anytime Moblle HorMt PRICED TO SELL 9200 :~ stole, Un&erie, ttc.: MONKEY &: CAGE :towels, linens, BR aet, nll $20. Loveable, MiDtinr. lamp1, mi.c.; l'ff· ·Easy to Keep. 642-!Mll9. Newport Bay Gold Coast Lido Trailer Park. Cabana & new trailer fully equipped. aleeps 6, 2 baths, alum awnings, ::over ed patio. Mr. Ball 67J..6030. ..... &M-0.117. lP ·mm:reoARDS 9'1" to ~'8" Warcly, Jacob a, ,G&rdie, Jeffery Dale le ~n ns lo $45. 154ll Ceda.rwood Midway C1t:Y ~ ~· iri.:.t:wooo 3n&' 4xll Lautn .Sl-99 4x7 Pre f'1n $1.69 12" ;a~ lOc ft. ()pen Sun 3030 ~rlstol S U R F B 0 A R D S 10'2" ~er. 10' 4" Ruaell, xlnt ~· Just plginented by ~ .l See.; S80 ea. 546-1258 K.llWY vacuum c*Der and ~~mta. BalaJlce $51.10 Pl:\ timal.I payments. a-ed1l ~KE 5-7289, Anaheim. ~Si:I) Refrla'. $25. Good (X)l)o ~ Phone 673-1853 i?~MlNING to moY'l'! You'll '1ncl , an amaztna number at fUJwl In tOO.y'• OualOed Ads. Check them now. Dot• 8825 GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS AKC ~ <J:iamplon BLOOD LINES 1. Cb. ULK WIKING- BLUT Sch ill Top winning Shepherd of till nines 2. Ch. NORDRAAK of MATI'ERHORN 3 tirµes, Pacific Coast VictOl' Males-Females (5 weeks) &adt A Tan (lhota) BRD> FOR QUAJ.JTY .l TDifPERAMENT Pedigree with each Pup U M8fXi DIQts lG-2 PM 837-3865 Eves alt 6:30 PM $7995.00 New 24 Wlde Two B.th * Two Bedrm BEACH TRLR. SUPPLY 19'l61 Beach Blvd. Huntington Be11rb 536-!m.2 '66 PACEMAKER 2 BR. $2.000 down. take over pyts. $99.61 mo. Dick · 548-2904 SPARTONEITE 8x35' Excel cond, furn, awning, storage shed. 548·7421 Adult Park. Motorcycl .. 9300 '68 HONDA -6.5 only 450 ml. AKC REG. TOY POODLE Perfect cone!. Must sell $250 Male, SASSAFRASS Une · 6'7S-2486 Jet Bl~ck. • month~ old D_U_C_A...,...Tl_m_o-to_rcy_c". Like ~ampion Sire ($125) 545-new. Low mileare, $325. 549- 4406 3287 after 5 PM. • aDEE TO YOU HOW Aboot an EASTER.I=======-~ .. f: POODLE? EK~ Motorseooters 9350 AKC reg quality. $1S0.1-------- • Spot Cash for Imports We pay more for an) import re&a.rdless ot year, make or condition. Try ur. befort you sell. EL M O R E MOTORS, 9625 G a r d e n Grove Blvd JE 7-6630 '67 SEO. white, blk. int. ra- dio, fitted cover, ski rack, ·chains. xJnt·· cond. 9 mo., 9700 Ml Sl695. 67>1166 Jim. ALFA ROMEO '66 Alpha Romeo Spyder Make otter 6-42-8396 After 6 PM '65 Spyder Veloce S apd con· courae cond, low miles, blue A blk. $1800. 493-3380 AUSTIN HEALEY '66 AUSTIN HEALEY Sprite Conv. Mark Ill Exetnent condition! $1150 ·~· •62 AUSTIN Healey, wire wheels, O'drlve, new tires, loi &: lonneau cover. Xlnt cond. n495. 968-3222 FERRARI 1'errarl Late Luao Cpe Top cond thruout, Tool kit, handbk, etc. 5"-7146 JAGUAR '6 7 JAGUAR XKE Coupe. Like brand new. Oirome wire wheelJI. $4695 STANSBURY BUICK sEvtRAL Gentle you n g 5tH)9(& MINI..&IKE 4 hp motor, neW cats. Need IOOd homes. DACHSHUND AKC re r . dutch Bcmnz.a fr&JM. Nev· 2100 HARBOR ILVD. ~ beb-e 4 p.m. 4/1 female « 1"ktden. $175. Call 549-COST A MESA ~9022 'JINY Girl puppy who will be ~esi. 1 Yar old. 3287 aft. 5 PM - iuna11 c1og 1tiots. trained =· * S48-&10J. ~ 419 'DOR.ABLE DA~ for Traller, Trnel RR.EE qu11lllied borne lari' Euter. Tue• bite • we 11• SCADABOUT, slps. 4; YIM~ area. AKC brown A don't! Sholl. AKC. 642-2123 equip . ., I stove. sink. lce- fU«'male Dobie 11" yr ' dog BOXER Puppies; AKC box A side attachabJe tent. tise..Adlt.a or older cbildml S50 and up Used once! 962-6851 ~ &28-3545 aft 5. '4/10 ~ 15' LANCER. 1956. 10x8 iifttt To rood home. male SCHNAUZER Pupplea Male cabana, &: extras. $660. 2803 f.erman Shep I: female It female. f150 ea. 546-6300 Frances Lo, CM. ~1974 Samoyed both 6 mOI. 2224 dyl. ~ eves. taciflc CM. Week days on-MIN DAQISHUNDS Trucks. 9500 ======== ~ 419 Only 2 malea left. __ ..._______ MG 'f"ll1'IT aooct homes for 2 AKC rqistered. '60 each Mbabi,, mbced-breed pupa. e 982-7689 e t wkl. Small breed. 147. 5 BOXER PUPPIF.S ~ "9 .AKC REGISTERED •iiiilm:Rs" . mtud Bu-~-a: Doxie. Need kind e 54().5223 e ~ bome. 10 moa. RUSSIAN wolf bound, 4~ G~":.:. 673-1540 4/ll mo, bMut. apr fem, AKC. -- -•bots. Trained 494-2376 \?~~:1:.:; ~~; AFGHAN HOuND-PUP DEMONSTRATOR ~ lot. He needl Laood borne Male: 5 mos. Beautiful, re.-~lm6'. 41n IOnable: sbotl. 962-9989. 1967 &MC %·TON rociA-Poo b.lact female 3 .BOXER PUPS. AKC ..,.,.... LoY@ly pet tor Ot-6'133 Camper Crulatt Pickup truck ~·· FMter. 8'7r4l29 D6ily 9-1. Weekenda M Automatic tramrn.iak>n, ra· k Sto.3olO ut. 2'7L "11 dio lftd beater, power steer· ~ P\rppy I ftlEJC Llv•tock 8840 lng. heavy duty rubber. old, TntJnl!d, hM ~ lhc*. HORSES Boarded $35. per $3195 ~ 4111 mo. AIM> aood alfalfa for ~1.E &aale • COdce' a al,. $39. per ton. Ha.y ·STANSBURY mixture puppy, t wtta. delivered· ~ : '!itU H• all. 5 4/ll d;:s ranre • wor1ttQr -229 TUHSPOllTATION BUICK tearl. Baa-I 1 I a n d ~ 411 IMtt & Yachts 9000 2100 HARBOR BLVD. 11DOOOa b11r 1Uck 14' DART 11oop w I utr. COSTA MISA 646-9022 -. 2 lldthl cM. Ml $31»; Alla 14' ~ '51 ·Fard * T. p.u. w/54 4lt um. s HP o'\oud. SIOD. Buldt 322 C'll In eng. Good a le.rp cqe. m> Mtqwet Dr •• NB .._ body A titts. 15" rim1 $350. mt ..... ...,. 6M ...... OWNER mUlt tell '65 MGB, Pen!~t Shape! Everythlne zings. Many extru. New PireW tires', disc brks, wire wbls, well cared for. A real buy for S17S5. Early AM, eves. wlcends. 646-1077 or 494-1701 , ( '52 MG TD "Cass.le'' Rrstrd, Xlnt mecb I: rung cood, Br. Rec Gm, nu ophJ, rad, $950 Pvt pty ~6 ·ss MG TD. Broken crank. Stripped paint. Good top, int. It tires. Make Ofter! ~\ -1953 MGTD ••• $495 536-1908 afttt 5 PORSCHE PORSCHE '60 Coupe • Red ,. °"'Pl • y ellow 'St' OlcJpe • Silver '58 Qlupe • Blue VOLKSWAGEN ~ TOP '"BOO TM-• boot ~Ing l.IJ~l :::m!.S~~~; to • MW car: AND TRUCKS II.lee car. No. PlZ16 •. uted car with $2995 a 100% 9uarantee. Any Make °' Medel. E\tet')' major workl.na part• CCHOEVNRNOELLLET STANSBURY Is guaranteed 100% for 30 days or 100> miles. Whlcb-2 " bo Bl d ever come• first. So 11 dur-8'8 Har ' v ' BUICK ing that time anything goes COST A MESA ~g· with any of these 546-1203 2100 HARBOR BLVD. pert.a. we'U 1~ or re-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ COSTA MESA 646-9022 place It ft-ee. But just bee;iuse we're an authorized VW dealer, don't think we're only talking a bout used VWs. We inspect and guarantee every make on our lot. For lnstaoc-e: • engine • transmission • rear axle· front axle assem- blies • brake system • electrical liystem READY TO GO OVER 70 VOLKSWAGENS TO CHOOSE FIOM LAl•IST SILECTION IN .01.ANGE COUNTY o~,~so~ ~~.,- Sport wagon. V8, automatic, power steering, radio and heater. 8,000 miles. S4195 STANSBURY WE PAY .. ' BUICK CASH 2100 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA 646-9022 ror used cars & trucks juat -- call us for free estimate. GROTH CHEVROlfT Ask for Sales Manarer 182ll Beach Bl., Huntington Beacti KI S.3331 4 dr. SEDAN. F act. "AIR 2100 HARBOR BLVD. COND." Full power eq. etc. etc. Showroom cand. *'> COSTA MESA 646-9022 out. Gllatening An ti q u e ''' CHEVR-OLO Malibu conve.rtlble. V8, auto- matic, Power 1teerlna, rad.lo and heater. $1295 STANSBURY BUICK 2100 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA 646-9022 Gold w/ lmmac. iold inter . <cost over $5.000 IM!'llf!) Never so much for llO little! Pay you to lnvestlple! ONLY $1995! lat car lot on waroor Blvd. JOHNSON & SON Uncoln-Mercury Costa Meaa Branch 1941 Harbor Blvd. 642-7UIO '63 MERCURY. Colany Park station wagon. Bnnd new. Lease for $1)4 pr month. All maintenance A ·ten'ice FREE. Includes air cond. Power steering A bnkes, n.d:io, 3rd seat etc. C a.11 Hal Sanders, Leaae Manag· er, JobMon A Son. 642-0081. 'GS Mere Mont, 4 dr, oce owner, RAtH. air, pb, pa. xtnt cond, Pvt pey, ne See at 25'4 Newprt Blvd CM '67 C&maro, red, like new -,63-M-erc--M,....et_eo_r._...,whtte~-=HT=, oond. 327 v.a. auto., fact. new M1dle{in x tires, pwr air, many extras. Don't buy atr, Xlnt cond. S950 or otter. without seeing this fi~1! 494-9952 . eves. Orig. $3,743 • asking S2143. .:::;========I ~ owner 548-9 554 334-2367 '67 C&maro, priv . party. 6 CyJ., 155 HP, pwr steer. &: brakes: auto .. low mileage; xlnt cond. $2270. 962-8592 After 5 PM wkdsys GOING into service, mult aeU. '67 CJ:IEV. SS 396; model 13817; 8 cyl., 4 ~ Xlnt cond. 8.00> Mi.; a.at. $2600. 5'40-3558 '66 CHEVY Malibu 2 DR MUSTANG '66 MUST All& black vinyl top. white body. VB, automatic, power ~ Bla.ck Int. bucket seals. Con-Ing, radio, heater, Landul sole. RIH, aJr. 6'-3231 top, factory air condltioninr. 1963 Malibu, RAH. 3.5.000 mi, $2195 Fine ~duation present! 549..0301 -673-1190 Im MAalOll ILVD, COSTA MES .. 1967 VolkswGCJen $1699 $1225 ~2783 RY WiJI Buy 9 PASS Wegon, 1960 Chev, 6 STANSBU Your Volkswagen or Ponche _'65 BUICK ~:. ~i:IG OWNER. BUICK 6 Mo~,000 Ml. Guar. lncluelel iO HP Series, Wind> ahlaJd Wll!hers, f u 11 Vleyl It pay top . dollanl. Paid for Electra 4 Door hardtop. Full -------- or not. Call Ralph power and factory sir con. CONTINENTAL 2100 HARBOR BLVD. 673· 1190. dltioning. 31,000 ~Ues. Tilt ----COSTA MESA 646-9022 Interior, Outside MI r rot, -------- Heater. Defroster. as well t••11d Cart 9900 wheel. '68 CONTINENTAL. Brand •66 Mustang Conv. Auto. new. Lease for $155 pr PIS P/B. Fae air. month. I n c I u d es total Interior decor Chrome service & mainteriance frt-e. wheels. Orig Owner. $1985 Call Hal SandeTS, Lease aft 6 Pm 615-2379 $2595 STANSBURY BUICK u cleanUJ) and deUvery. $182 Full On. Payment Includes Tax & Lie. $55.24 mo. bank finan. Ask •bout our $1!2 Dn -36 mo @ $40.9H 1 final l>(tyrnent for title. T&M MOTORS Specializing · VW &: Porsche 8141 GARDEN GROVE BL. GARDEN GROVE 892.5551 or 53 .. ~M READY TO 60 OVER 70 VOLKSWAGENS TO CHOOSE FROM LARGEST SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY 549-0303 -6n-1190 mt H•A•Olt nvo. COSTA MIU MUST SELL 1966 VW Fully equipped including new tires. seat belts. cus- tom pe.dcagt> tray, transis- tor radio. TOP CONDm ON. Make reasonable oiler. 64&. 5745. '66 VW equareback, AM & FM new t1rcs & brakes, ex- cel. cood. 642-BSr.' '96 VW, l owner. alr con- dltlonlng. Very cleM. SH50. 84.~3614 '64 VW Varinnt Wagoa, new brakes & ll'ans. $1800 . • 6'7>3390 da.)'I .• •ea VW; xlnt cend.; new tires, brakes, mufDer &: In- terior! 83().m:J PLACE your wMt ad wbere tt..ey. are looking -DAILY P1lm cla~s1fied 6C-567I VOLVO '681fl VOLVO NOW HI U I SEE THEM TODAY 2100 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 646-9022 *"QUALITY" COMPACT Manager, Johnson & Son, -,6-7 _M_•_lltan_g_v-.s--,1astt.ck.-.~ 642-0981. stlck lhift with air. $DIO. 'Cl CONT. conv., It. blue; 847.J818 alt 6. r-eal clean: Xlnt tires: Orig. owner $895 646-20'11 '65 Muatang, stick, 6; .In tap cond. Best otter owr Sl.075. '63 Uncoln Cont. convert., 64.2-4<81 644-2336 eve. $300 A auume $500 loan. 212 , Marguerite, CdM. 875-1078. 1966 SHARP M~tang w/air, '61 BUICK V-8 iwedal SKY-COUGAR LARK 2 Dr. HDTOP SPORT ---~-~-·­ pwr. auto, Must lell. $1900. Call 962-8229 aft 3 p.m. CPE. Power steering, A/T, R /H. Spru-kllng orig. Arctic white. A smartly scyled substantial model in a just rigiit size for many! Act now! ONLY $695 11t ..-Jot on RartJor aw. '68 COCGAR. Brand n ew. PLYMOUTH Le8ae for $99.50 pr month. -.63-P_L_Y_M_OUTil ___ S -P -o -r t-• Included maintenance & service. Alr cond. Power Fury, 2 dr HT, ps, pb, low steering, radio, buckets, etc. '::mil:::. ·::::e:::s,::::S:::750=84:::7::-284l===:..I Phone Hal Sanden, Leu! l\hnafe'I', Jobnloo It San. 6Cal. PONTIAC J0~!1~~re~~ON ..==D=O::::;D:::::G=E== Costa Mesa Branch '57 Oub Q>e. • ......... $100 1!M1 Harbor Blvd. 642-7Cli0 '58 Fom Wagon ........ $1751::=:::-=======- •59 Pontiac 4 Dr •••... , S200 CADILLAC '60 Jtanch(>ro •••••••••• $300 --------'60 "T" Bird .......... $400 TRANSPORTATION ~-.J •A/J 100% F inancing Available ~ Also Wt> carry our own -......... $49ro;.:acS 499 • NEWPORTER MOTORS 4 acre• ot ultra modem total 2036 Harbor Blvd 548-5294 Cadillac 1acllftl.e1 designed NEED A CAR? to bet ter seU and semee. CAN'T BF: FINANCED? new and used Cldlllac auti> e BSUlkrupt? •Repogesslon! mobilu. •Bad Credi!? • Dlvnrcedt NA B ER s •Military •New In A.rea'T Makr Payt111y Paymentl ~ McCARTHY MOTORS • M20 So Maln It Edinger (2 blocks N. of Sesn) Santa Ana Ph 542·35<17 2600 HARBOR BLVD. COST A .MESA s.0-9100 BUICK CHEVROLET '6A BUICK RIVIERA ''' CHEYROUT '63 DART GT Cpe., R/H, auto., $795. PERFECT! 492-0057 FALCON e '60 Falcon e Best transportation $175 6'7S-1450 FORD * ''THINKING PEOPLE BUY '67 FORDS WITH Uncotn.Mercury Costa Mesa Branch 1941 Harbor Blvd. 60-'lQ!O ROY CARVER PONTIAC JUST 13,892 MILES!" · '67 FORD "390" v.3 GA!, -Htrt-or Bl.. Colta M• AXIE "SGq'' HDTOP SPORT Kl 6-4444 CPF.. In showroom cond. Onuip County'a ~ ~parkllng Sierra gold w/ Dealer for kolla • ~ ... lmmac. gold Int«. 1bls AIR Bently. CONDITIONED pwr. eq. '64 Pontiac LeMans VB foll beauty avallabte w/ 50,<m power plus factozy air mile extended factory war-Bucket Seats etc. Nice ce.r ranty et over $1300 savtnr <'lln be 1een at 901 E. lat 1rom nrw• St., Santa Ana. S 2 5 • 0 ONLY $2895 deltven1 OAC full price orb 1st car lot on liartlor Blvd. $1495.00 caIJ Credit Manqfll' JOHNSON & SON at 542..,1 uncoln-Me"'ury '64 LeMans CQIY. PIB, Co~ta Mesa Brandl PIS. conaole, bucket seats. 1941 Harbor Blvd. 642-70Ci0 $lal(). 49.ooo Ml. 673-2659 ---:-:--~· - -'fO Pont. Ventur. 4 Dr . ......_ * "9" p-.. n9er ·-¥ ..,._ Auto.. power. Xlnt ClOnll. 1~ F 0 R D V..S "3.52" $350. 54IKi694 COUNTRY SEl>AN STA· =====:::-:=::..I n ON WAGON with the pop-T·llRD ular dual facing f'MI' aatl! tow mileege new c:a.r tradt- ln. Sparkling Sima Gold. A "rare find" al · --+-Ptr--~ .. :__---'----+-~-u.~ .... fV"H---1---.:-:--=:::-:-:::-=:--~~-~-vN~l~Y-$~t~~l----f~OWMl'~'Nlirlthd4p-·..,~~-------- 1.t tar lot on Harl!or Blvd. cont m. tilnhtn !18,«JO JOHNSON & SON tua1 ml!H1 m.z28 aft.. s. ..U.Coln.M~ ..---~-·BIBn_ _......,....,.. ___ _ Colt& ~ Bnnch 0000 CONDJTION '18 !'~-... ........ 1941 Harbor Blvd. 642-7000 .5f6.881!1 aft. S PM WW. I ct , r mar ..... .,,.. J 12 , t ... ,..,, .,.., .. .,., ... Lei"s ForgiTe UCLA Hunts Car That Will LOS ANGELES - University o f California physicians and eogtneers are pooling their talent.a and st l.ldies for a thorough look at traffic safety problems. They will draw on what l'C expert& have learned in 17 years of staged but bor· rendous auto and b u s crashes. involving lifelike dummies, at the UCLA laboratory of the lnctitute of Traffic and Transportation Engineering. They will also make use of medical analys· es of 700 serious traffic ac· Delinquency Talk Slated cldentl, obm'ved ftrst hand and~ for suble- cquent study at the UCLA School of Medicine. The dNM ol the UCLA CoDece o1 Engineeri:nc and Sc:bool of Medicine ao- oounced they hope to baDd a "systematic body of knowledge Oft the caUJet ot motor vetWcle accldenta" which will be of natioael use by studying tra:tflc inJur'* and deaths and bow they relate to vehicles. drivers anc1 drtms conditions. The flnt phase, ~ by a $200,000 irant lrom the Federal Highway Administration. will Include anelyses ol present and future efforts and costs to Improve auto safety stan- dards. Tbls will include n.a· tional medical studies of ac· cider.ts a n d engineering analyses of automobile safe· ty performance. E r n e s t Bachelor. con· sultant o n delinquency prevention to the California Youth Authority. will speak at the meeting of the Oran~ County Juvenile Of. flcers Association n ex t Tuesday at 11:45 a.m. in the Theo Lacy Jail Facility, 500 Expanding on research at the Institute, engineers will stage collisions to confirm medical findings at "real" accidents. The objective. ac· cording t o Engineering Dean Chauncey Starr. is •·to eventually come up with a • f o r g i ving' automobile. which will tend to protect the occupants, even with in· ~uate driving." U,.IT.._..... S. Manchester, Orange. Lunch will be served Reservations must be made with Dick Grodt at 897-2511, or Hank Marmor at 828- 1222. Batt"leslaip Baek in Service Ceremonies at the Philadelphia Naval Base last weekend put the USS New Jersey back in com- mission. The batUewagon, veteran of two wars, Is the only battle~hip in service and wlll operate off Vietnam. The Delaware River (background) was patrolled by police and Coast Guard to stop any at· tempt by demonstrators tn di~rupt thP ceremony. ---------~-__._· ---. ---~. Join The EASTER PARADE To • • • • DOWNTOWN Everything for -Easter is available, displayed in bright colors of Springe DOWNTOWN BUSINESS MEN'S ASSOCIATION of COSTA MES~ 8 & H OFFICE EQUIPMENT 541 Cent•• Strttl 6411-744) CARPET TOWN '14 W. lttll St .• CHI• Mttt 6-42·005 COAST MUSIC I Ut Ntwport llvd., CHI• Meia 6-46°0271 COSTA MESA JEWERLY & LOAN I Ill Ntwporl llvd., Ceil• Mtt• 6-46-7741 DRS. CRAWFORD, DALE & NELSON Oplol'lt+.ith. 1796 Newport llvcl. S41-56J• CRAWFORS PHARMACY 1104 N-port ll•d-Costa Mesa so.nu DUNLAP APPLIANCES I 115 N-po,. llYcl., Cttl• Mtta so .nu GRANT'S SURPLUS I 701 Ntwpert ll•cl., Ct .. a Mtia ....... 6 HALF.SIZE SHOP I IOI lll•wport 11 ...... C.sta Moe M6-t2H HART'S SpORTINO GOODS Ill C.lliw Str ..... C.ste Mtt• ......... HIMPHILLS SHOIS I U I H_,w+ 11 ...... c..te Mts• ..... ., ... J. C. HUMPHRIES JEWELERS I 12l Newport llvd., Cost• Mesa 541°3401 JERRY HALL TIRES I 7U Ntwpor+ llvcl., Costa Mut ..... o" MARTIN FURNITURE I HS Ha ....... llvd .. Co.t• Mua 141-51 l I MARY CARTER PAINTS "16 Hul>or llv4., Coile Mtse 642·1090 POINT OF COLOR 516 W. "ti• S1,..1, Costa Maia 64'-0571 RALPH'S FURNITURE I IOl Nt wp•rt 11•4~ Cts+a Mata 54 ... 59) REALM OF CARPETS 21 IS Hartt.r 11"4 .. Ct9'• Mtta '40-'4121 RllNIRT'S DIPT. STORE 1116 H-p..+ 1"'4 .. Co1ta ...... 541·1212 ROllRTS flURNITUlE I ~H Ntwp.rt ll•4., Coste M••• ....... u SHAW'S NUTRITION aASKIT I HI Her\., 11"4 .. Ct&ta Me .. 541 .• 424 SINClltl SIWING MACHINE CO. 1111 Hert..' ...... " Ctsl• Mtta 64M742 • FREE . PARKING AREAS NEAR EVERY DOWN- TOWN 'STORE l . .. . . .. . ... _ ..... -~~ ... ---- w••••• A!Jtlna .. Neanderthal Man Had Headaches PETEJt J. STEINCftOllN A good bet ii that man suffered from beatacbes tbousandl of yean ago. U he bad arthritic changes in bia cervical (neck) splne, the odds are that he had a ~ in the bead as well u .ill the neck. . For uample, Jtudjes ol Neaoderthal man. who lived .ill 40 000 BC, s h o w e d cervi~ arthritis. Not being able to go to the corner drugstore for aspirin. I won- der what the distracted com.mcm trbam.-flljwo. dudnt P* ta tie ~ •nd paill in tbe bead. Many -ch patMnb ... es peela l 1 y selllitive to drafta and 'tbm· tn1 produced by air con· dJtioninC. · The beadacbes themMIY~S ranee from tlitbt to hardly bear Ible. Tbey may ·be locallnd in the back of the neck and bead, but US1Jl'lly spread upward inte> tbe ' temples and back of the eyes. They may come on at anv time, day or night Patients vary In their delCJ'tptlons of the pain: "~ tight bnd·.'' "like a vise," "ain aclri:n.g,'' "a pressure on top of the bead." : . SEARCH FUTILE fellow used for r e l i e f . Cervical arthritis ·and Probably, what we use now : muscle spasm are only-one massage of the n e c k of many poaible causes. of muscles to relive spum. headache. And the ao.rch Mrs. W. writes that her for the real cause it eftell husba.ad. age 43, has been seemingly futile. But.. lf • tl\e complaining I a t e I Y of doctor keeps investiptlng headaches. Although they he i.s more likely to dia~vtr are relieved by aspirin, hot the reuon. towels and massage, she is You will note that 1 say con<:erned that they have . "if the doctor keeps tn· been recurring too fre· vesUgating." Self.treatment quently. of chrorue headacbes is At first she was worried often a drain on both potut· that he bad high blood book and on health. Anyone pressure. His doctor loot~ with headaches that · ~P him over and found him m recurring should hari. a good condition. There was medical investigatiOO' and this exception: X rays sbo~· stop guessing. ed a1britic cbanges in bis You need not run ta the ..upper s.piDe.---c1octor-tor Mp-u -an oc· ~~t--&wll31--~ aspbin «~­ thing; escept '!bat be 1lmllar drug relieves an » was already doing t o casional headache. But do overcome ttle headaches. run if you have been getltng WORRY CAUSE Sometimes, however, the headaches due to muedespasm-in the neck are due to teMioo, either throogb worry, or through the nature ol ooe'a oc cupatioo. For example, n e c k muscles may become con- tr aded In typlsta, boo le· keepers and proofreaders, anyooe who uses bis eyes a lot. Eyestrain. neck rigidity, emotiooal temion are a them m«e frequently. For tboee who suffer btom beadaches and would like to Seam J.DOH about them, l recommend "1 ette.U-nt paperbld book you . can pk,k up lit the news stand. Written by n expert. tbe late Noah D. Fabricant. M.D., it is ca l~e d "Headach.es -( W h a t Cauees Them and How to Get Relief)." 01". Sltlncrdltl'• .,.,._ .. ,. ''Wiie~ 10 do fol' CIM'Oftk Alntlef'l'.H Wiii .. 1111ti.ci to YOU If YOU ..... e tf~ • Mii· .-......i _._. IM 2S cenb ~ Dr. Slelncrdw\. lft _.. of ltlb .......... Washington Lear~ It's Just One City By JOHN BECKLER WASHINGTON (AP) - Down the mall from the bright bubMe of the capitol dome to the brooding figure in the Lincoln Memorial, Washington looks the same. But a deep ctiange has taken place A dty that had been slow· ly hardening into t w o separate cities, one 41Wb.ile and one black, has been made searingly aware it i& OM. How it ructs to this awareness may bold an answer for otber cities af • Okted with racial troubles. One answer l!ffms ap- parent: A cool and carefully pl.anoed response to lootl.nl and burning may be able to s-chieve reswt. witllout tAe bloodshed and violence that marked last summer's riot. in Newark and Detroit. POLICE WITBDRA WN In the early n.ces of the disorders in the capital, the outnumbered police were wittldrawn from t r o u b 1 e areas so they would not have to resort t(> gunfire to protect themselves. Later, backed by fedttal troops, they moved forcibly but with restraint agalmt the looters and rounded up curfew violatm by the dro~. The result w a s a You Must Sign Tax Delivery of federal fn. come tax refunds to ll,8lil taxpayers ls S o a t b t r n Caillonia l1 beiAC beld up because tbe returns were flied wtthout D I C t II I 1 1 Ii sutures. ''Instead ~ refmd ebecb, theM tupa,... .,. ptttnc the.Ir 1040 forms 1-:t to be slgned, '' DlJtriet Director I'. , .. . . . . .. ' minimum of deaths and in· juries and a massive 4.800 arrests. The performance of the District of Columbia police a1ld the troops has drawn praise from Ally. Gen. Ramsey Clark and is likely to set a pattern for the police in other ci~ .. .. BLIND RAGE There was encouragement also in the i m m e d I a t e response of the white com· munlty to the despair the black community inflicted on itself in it& blind rage and frustration. Appeals for food for the per90DS living in tbt riot area, where food stOres were either burned. rooted or locked up. brougtit a tremendous outpouring from the wbit.e are&S. "This is the real beg}nnln~ of the real meaning of the lif.e of Martin Luther King.'' said a white civic leader ac· tlve in the food drive. ''Who was overwhelmed by .the response . LONG BAUL For the long b-a u l . however, the Negroes in Washington need what they need in every urban att~ - more and better Jobe, better schools and better housing. And it takes mon than a willing spirit to 101,>ply tbem. Concre-baa passecl tn\111 t.o me« all tbele needf and Pr.ident Jobneon bM Uk· ed for more, bat a 1-Ct of money hlll crippled m-.1 of the Jll'00'9ml. • • Tbe dly bebe ,die r1otlng .tarted m w~. the HOUie aipproftd an . ~~ p r o p r I a ti o D blD tblt ellm1nated '7S milUoe for a sllDlJDeT prosram • t o r unemployed )'Oatbl *. an lddltional '25 million tar tJ>f Head sg,t preschool pro-sram. · Jobnlon, who could see tbe alDOb from the barning 1"cro •~u from thl,.Whlte HOGlt, WW!cl ~:~e tlo Nq\lest IGIDI emll'Jl'*1 ... voe. Vo M~ Fo New IOGDdJ m<>nt.b Ding poi nth City buried 2.629 ( At f posed provec -Ne requir from 1 favore -Ne candid regisu by 6,l -Ne within lion. 1 Ne Mt To New Grube the dt organi Grul begin meetir flcial. The is to s said h in t.be two cc Thei elecUo the ne MOI' councl DOree1 nimail or Co. ~ ·;] ·~ .. • II I .