HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-04-15 - Newport Harbor Daily PilotVOL 6i, NO. •f, J SECTIONS, 34 PAGES
W4o'llBe
Newport's
New Mayor
Newport Beedl'1 Dft city eoGXil
will turn eo N ftni -.k lboritr ,._
4:30 p.m. 'tlleedl;y -M1ectioa of a
mayor.
Who will tt be?
Doreen Jbnb111. 9CC*~ to many
political ablerwrs.
Undaley Parson1, ~ to
others.
Mrs. Mlrsball, vice mayor fOr ttle
put two ye_.., is available for the
job, me ga.ys.
ParlOOI, newly re~lected to the
COW'lcll. II allo willing to eerve.
B&Md Ol'I wnous facCxlrs, the best
bet( and nobody is betting in a ~ar
filled with politkal ~) I.a:
Mrs. Manball, mayor; Parsons,
vice m.,._..
n.t, however, is stridly educated
guesSW«t. Memben cl the Dl'W COUil·
cil area 't taltinC .t>out ft f« publica·
Ucn.
"Let's mot 1tart · out with con·
troveray." one uplamed.
efeatl&r""~H&' ttmf"WltttJkt'°
place immediately aUer dle newly
elected councll members take their
oaths of office end are ~d.
City Clerk Laura Lag.io.s will ad·
mi.nilter the oat.ha and .erve as
obairman during Ule mayoral oornina·
tions -Ol" oominatiOl'I, if one onJy is
oeeded. A majority vote by tt'le aeveo-
member council is sufficient foa-ttte
appointment
Usually the ballotinl is conducted
bpenly. Two years ago, bOwever, coon·
cilmen lot lbe first time ill Uie city's
hi.story called for a secret ballot.
Mayor Paul Gn&ber was nM!~
in a 4-3 vote.
Fint duty ol the city'1 new mayor
will be to llpPOW vwious sanMtioo
dJttrict commfftee metnben. He -ot
.. -wil do bit Tuesday .. 4lMn
adjourn the meeU.., until the resutiar·
ly ld>edWed April = coundl Mllioa.
Schmitz Facing
Legal Ac~on
On 'Fraud' Book
A San Bernardino County 1upervi.lor
saJd Sunday be and other count offi·
ciala may take letal 1etion against
the author of a paperback book and
against Sen. John Schmits CR·Tu•tin)
who wrote the boot's introduction.
The 2:50-page story claims to be the
"in1lde" on welfare fraud in San Ber·
nardino County. Author ls Belva Det·
lo/f, a former employe of the county's
welfare department
Supervilor Ruben Ayala said that he
challenged the accuracy of the book's
account of a San Bernardino County
famJly Uvi!lg in incell\JOQI refatlon-
shJp. Sen. Schmitz said some weeks ago
he planned to use e~ provided by Mn. Detloff to hls bUJ
whlch would put a ce g of f400 on
monthly paymenll to welfare reclp-
lents.
The book whJtb is not yet in general
circulation claims that a family which
came to Callfornla from Colorado did
not meet residency requirem~ts. It is
alleged that payments of nearly $1,000
a month were authorued.
Jt also charges that the mother of
the family Oldinued to produce illegit-
imate children, as did her older daugh·
ter after moving to San Bernardino.
NEW YORK (AP) -The *>ck
market recovered frcm a lliebt e.ly
loss and di.lpl.,ed a mixed pettern
thU af~n. <See quotltiom, Pares
22-23).
Volume for the fl!'Wt four houri wu
10. 72 mlllion lbares compand witb
9.57 mi.Won 'Ibw'tday.
-Yippies' for Easter
All flowered up for "yip-oot'• at New York City's Central Park wen
Jack Lebowitz Oeft) and Bob Bower, members of Youth International
Party (they call themselves "Yippi.es"). Easter Sunday ~atbering la
park was dedicated to "resurrection of the tree."
-Bal-Week -De-ad.----
Officially Now
By BRUCE BENSON
Of l1M Delly """ ... ,.
Bal Week '68 is dead and burled, the
unwanted obild of 8fll01ber era.
'Ille surf was up, the sun was out
and scboo1s. ~re closed, but the usual
l\ol'des of vacatiooing studeots oever
cbecked in.
Nwport Beach wasn't euctly
spurned. Viaitors who gamboled on its
Midy tborel llUIDbered COO:liderably
..... ,,... .. Wt.
Bat they kept goio1 bee •t night.
The aacUUoDal Bal Week features of
noily hoUse pert!~. fur example, were
at • minimum.
And as a result, arrest& ~e Wrt
down, from about 550 the year before
to 381.
As~ crimes also were and
m09t of those committed we Dot ot a
violent nabn. The egory of
tramgressioos to be petty
thefts, 8<.'COl"ding Assistant PoUce
Chief Merrill
Ufeguard
weekend
The wa hovered just under 59
deg , While ttle air tern perature
wes in tbe low 70s.
A year ago the same weekend,
slightly cokier weather drew about
55,000 people.
The sluggish pace of Bal Week
frolics was laid to two principal
reasons : -~l units ere taken for nine
mon1ib& by growing numbers of
Women Discuss
Airport Future
Orange County Airport. Its future
and its noise problems. will be
discussed at a meeting of the Woman's
Civic League of Newport Beach Tues-
day.
Speakers will be Jack .Mullai:i.
chairman of the city council's Air
Traffic Advisory Committee, and
Daniel Emery, a member of the
Airport Safety Committee. a citizens'
group.
The session will be held at Mariners
Library's multi-purpose room at 9:30
a.m. The public is lnvJted. Mullan will talk about what the city
Is doing concerning alrcralt noise
abM.ement procedures, whUe Emery
will tell what homeowners are doing to 6-aJrport expansion.
students, thus leaving f e w ac-
commodations for the spring nca-
tioners.
Today's , youth! are more ~ile
with more money, and head for less
strictl,y policed area!.
Marines Seize
Hill in moody
~:)~:~~~rines aeiz·
ect c 1iill northwest of Khe SIPlb from
its North Vietnamese defenders in an
Easter Day battle. An American
source said South Vietnamese, t{oops
soon wlll take on a bigger share of the
fighting along the northern frontier.
The battle for Hill 881 north. Live
miles from the Khe Sanb combat base.
was one of several sharp fights over
Easter. AP correspondent John Lengel
reported from Marine headquarters at
Da Nang that 108 North Vietnamese
were killed on 881 North -most of
them by artillery and air strikes that
preceded the Marine assault.
Six Marines were reported klUed
and 12 wounded.
Troops of the 26th Marine Regiment
stormed up the slopes. Sporadic
shooting continued after the hill was
declared secure early in the afternoon.
The hill was the scene of hard
fighting in the spring of 1967, and the
North Vietnamese hung on to it after
the siege of Khe Saab was fitted this
month.
The 28th Marine Regiment had been
in Khe Sanh during the 77-day slege.
After the encirclement was broken the
regiment moved out to sweep the sur·
rounding area.
The U. S. C.Ommand is preparing lo
replace American troops along the
demilitarized zone with South Viet·
namese forces, an American source
sald today. It was considered possible
that South Vietnamese troops wUl take
over defense of the Marine outpost of
Con Thlen and of Khe Sanh, now de-
f ended by a battalion of air cavalry-
men.
It was reliably learned that the
move will be carried out as soon as
the South Vietnamese 1st Division has
cor.1pleted refitting and retraining.
The division suffered heavy casualties
(See VIETNAM, Pafe !)
... ::-..,.. ' .. -. ..... ~ .... .... .... ... . . -..
MONDAY, APRIL I 5, 1968 1EN CENTS
2 l(illed • Ill l(orea
J
N. Koreans Attack; U.N. Pro)eSts
SEOUL (UPI) -U.N. officlala lodg. of~ gu~
ed a formal protest today against an A U.N 1poke1man aii4 a aecond
Easter nl&flt Communist ambush that m.ill~hehlcle found the ambutbec\'
killed two American and two South truc~t 10 mlnutes after it wu at..
Korean soldiers 800 yards from the tacP<t by an undetermined number ol
truce village ot Panmunjom. South l.Qllltrators. Occupants of the aecolld
Korean officials saJd P r e s 1 d e n t MM• vehicle said they heard about 200
Johnson will be asked for stronger .' :·:·\:::-:-.. rounds of automatic weapons fire and
U.S. military aid. . .. two explosions.
They said President Park Chpng NOITH · ·. ::~·\. The American dead were not lden-Hee would ask for the "firmer"1U.S. "'OIE & · ' tified.
comm.ltmerrt to guarantee Korean .· ~ ".i• ~-~.:y:l.v .. ./ A patrol 1ent into the area by the security. Park meets Johnson at a. _,US U.S. Second lnfan"-Division found
Honolulu Wednesday. ·'. ralllllllljom · · .. ' none of the attacl:;!s, The attack oc·
North Korean i.niiltrators poured an ·: ,. $0UJt{ ... __ ... curred 800 yards IOUth of Panmunjom,
esU mated 200 rounds of automatic ICOllA :·:.·:·:.·,_. the village where the U.N. and Com·
weapons fire into a U.S. Army truck munilt truce auperviaora meet.
carrying six men. The two survivors, u,.1 .._, Rear Adm. John V. Smith. U.N.
both Americans, were wounded. senior delegate to the Korean Military
The truck, its lights on. was travel· KOREAN AMBUSH SITE AnnJsUce Commission, sent a
ing on the main road to Panmunjom, Crou Is Where It H•ppened mes11ge to his North Korean COUD·
moving from the U.N. advanced camp t~rpart calllni on the Communists to
just outside the demilitarized zone to cease "murderous attacks" on U.N.
the joint security area which sur-seizt.ire of the U.S. Naval intelligence personnel. He asked for a joint in·
rounds the truce village. ship, USS Pueblo. North Korea still vestigation, but no reply bad been
It was the first major incident in· holds its 82 man crew captive. received Monday mrntng. .
volving. infiltrator"' sinee N en th -lnfiltrat'Ors"ambushed-the truck' as it -The'lmburh"'brougbt1.T.cl1Jtlattlel
Korean terrorists raided Seoul in carried U.N, security guards into the in Korea this year to four killed and 14
January. It followed North Korean joint security area in a regul-ar change (See KOREA. Pafe %)
Lassies Looking for GrOom
But Ne ,wport Man 'Hiding' With His $105,000
A Newport Beach man whose elder-
ly aunt left him $105,000 and the ad-
vice to marry a sweet Scottish lassie
to help manage it lhriftlly was the sub-
]ect of an intense hunt today .
Among the hunters were more than
100 girls Crom Scotland and a number
of news agencies, including the London
Daily Mail.
But the would-be groom. identified ~ I tJnit8d Prell Jn!A!~Jt.lonal
dupatcb from Glasgow, Scotland, as
John Andrews, 25, could not be round.
Andrews wrote to the Lord Provost
of Dundee, Alexander MacKenzie,
seeking help in finding a blonde or red-
head between 18 and Tl to join him in
holy matrimony~
He offers S120 to the matchmaker
who sets him 'UP with the right girl.
Lord Provost MacKenzie will soon
airmail the first batch of more than
100 offers to the yeunt real e~ ap-
praiser although some applicants
Witness Identifies Photo
As King Killing Suspect
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (AP) -The
owner of a l)oardJng house sa.ld tod ay
ht: had JdentiCied a drawing oC a man
sought In the slaying of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. as a roomer known by
the name Eric Galt.
"It's him. I'm sure," said Peter
Cherpes, 72. wh-0 runs a boarding
house on Birmingham's South Side.
Cherpes consented to talk z.fter the
~·BI responded to his request to be
re!0 ased from a secrecy pledge.
Cherpes said FBI agents showed
him drawings about !art Wednesday.
or two days before a car registered in
the name of Eric Starvo Gtlt was
found abando~ in Atlanta. The car,
a white Mustang with an Alabama
Llcense tag. mtJtched the description of
a car seen leaving the assassination
sce ne in Memphis, TeM .. where King
was shot April 4.
Cherpes wa s shown a newspaper
artist's drawing of the ass&-Ssin today
and he said it was such like the draw·
mgs exhibited by federal agents.
Cherpes said tl1e aketches ''looked P.X·
actly like Galt."
The man known as Eric Starvo Galt
hu become tile object of a widening
~earoh by FBI agents, who have been
cont.acting persons with the same
name or similar names from Virginia
10 Flonda and sifting through dozens
of stores and businesses in Birm-
ingham for clues to the missing man.
The FBT issued an alert. called a
"locate and notily" dispatdl, in
Florida fo r Galt last Friday at about
the time the white Mustang was being
impounded in Atlanta. The alert was
withdrawn four hours tater with the
explanation that it had been er·
roneous.
Since tben, the FBl has decl~ed to
say anything about Galt. There was oo
warrant for him as ol Friday.
Galt rented a room from him,
Cherpes said, last fall, at about ttle
time the hunted man obtained an
Alabama driver's license.
He also purchased a white Mustang
from a Birmingham car salesman. He
listed his occupation as merchant
seaman, unemployed.
14 Youths Held
After Bal Week
Narco Rom1dup
Fourteen youths were awaiting
court hearings today on charges of
possessing marijuana after they were
arrested al a party early Saturday
mr.rnlng in Newport Beach.
The raid doubled Bal Week narcotics
arrests. On Friday. police had
reported only 15 bookings for nt.ircotics
offenses. about average for most
weeks during the year.
reportedly faJI short of his re-
quiremenll.
Andrews said in hls letter to
MacKenzie that his aunt, Alice Hilton.
who made a fortune in Southland
citrus growing, was of Scottish des·
cent herself and 'recommended a Scat.
ti.sh bride.
Many of the girls who admitted they
don't meet Andrews' ~uirements
suggested be migbt l)e wmtng to pro-
vide them with address~s of slJi&le
b\lddie5 in the sunuy Southland.
Johnson Flying
.To Honolulu for
Top Level Talks
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -President
Jotuuon fllea to Honolulu today for a
Vietnam war strategy review with top·
level Pacific military commanders
and a meeting with President Park
Chung Hee of South Korea.
Johnson wa.s to depart Bergstrom
Air Force Bue near Austin about 9
a.m. CST aboard Air Force One on the
eigbt·hour. 4000--mile flight to Hawall.
He will speak briefly on arrival at
Honolulu International Airport at 1 ~
p.m. l!ld will motorcade to a huge
welcoming ceremony staged by Gov.
John Burns of Hawall at loLanl Palace,
the government house ..
Johnson waa expected to receive an
Invitation to speak Tuesday morning
be/ore the 8th a n n u a 1 in·
terparlla,mentary m e e t i n g of
American and Mexican legislators in
Honolulu. Senate Majorlty Leader
Mike Mansfield is among them.
His full-scale war and peace policy
talks with military chlettalns at Pearl
Harbor aJso were expected to get
under way Tuesday. JohJl&OO was ex-
pected to confer with Adm. U. S.
Grant S h a r p , commander.fn-chlef,
Pacific, who retires Julf 2, and Adm.
John S. ·McCain. coblmander of
American naval forces in Europe.
whom the President named Sharp's
successor last week.
o ......
Weatller
City Plans Final Irvine Annex Step
Those arrested Saturd.ay momlng
included seven juveniles and an 18-
y~r-old girl. police said. Tbe other
were 18 and 19 years old.
Narcotics lnvestigator Leo Konkel
said two officers lcno<:ked on the door
of a residtfloe at 113"' 29th St. about
3:40 a.m. Saturday.
The 1un's a late 1Jeeper on
the Orante Coast -ht won't be up Wl afternoon. ays forecast-
er GoTdon Sblelds. Temperature.
lt'U ti. cooler with a top of 83
locally.
pneident who has protested every
at.tp oft.ht •nneutioa a.Jona the way. I.Mt W'9tk be obj~ when council·
men:
-Approved pre-ionlng of a 543-lot
portion o( the 212..ac:re territory above ~Vin Rlllt. ·-· -.\~ a t.entitlvt tract map f0.r
... ~ ...... ol deftlopment.
'n.e ....ution beal'lnt dat.e WU
lbe1l tel AB done bJ the council
were unantmoua.
p ... bM objected to the lrvlne pro-
ject from t.b eout.t bec:&Dll the com·
ptny't dtftlopment p\lns Include r.n
el~ eltmtntary ICbool site for
purcbNe oely. He would !Ute lrvlM to
itw the l* to the Newport·Meta
tlnlled Sd>oo1 Dtltli~ wtlkb already
faces 1 classroom ah<>rtaie problem.
Irvine o{flclals. however. contend
that it would be inequitable for the
computy to adopt such a giveaway
poUq. They point out that other
deveJopers are not uked to contribute
~:.~=)' for new achoolt. , ln approvtn.a all the a-n·
•~lidoa ~ 1o 4ate, ba.e em-
pftaeiled tblt lit Jia to the citT• and the
1cAeol dlltriot't a<tvantate to bave the
arq (tut ol MacA.rthu? Boulevard '{ Fen Rold> de¥elo9td according to
ml.Pllclpal IUlndarda. Annexatie>n, they
0NJ, la Ute only me.na of uaurlng this.
CltJ otttdala argue that II the tu·
rM«J '8 dev.loped under county atan-
de.rd.I ~r population dens.lty ;;M' M po11lbk, it not Uul,y. 'IbU,
.
11ey note. would intensify school
chstrict problems.
Pea~e. h-owever. still insists lb.at tlhe
cooncil. by delaytng an nexation, could com~l lhe Irvine C<>. "to negotiate'' a
hetter deaJ for the sch-001 di3trict.
In response to this, City Atty ... Tully
Seym our s.ays it I! not within the city's
legal responslbilitle$ 1o dtlay an·
nexation procedures for that reNOn.
Pease and other cltltena an exped·
rd to l'lav& more to say "'1 Ult tObject
\prll 22.
Meanwhile. tbe Donald L. Brtn Co
1~ g:>lng a\lead with plans to build &43
homes an the ''Upper Harbor View
lllJl1" annex.aUon are-a -und r city
~t•ndard~. They'll be on t.he l'Mfket
this summer.
• ....,_. -• -· ,.i-..i1 _______ _
U>uncilman Has
More Problems
It was a rough week for retiring
Newpcrt Beact\ City Coundlmao Dee
Cook.
Tuesday he \ott bis bid ror ~ection.
And over wfe~end he lost h1I fr'Ollt
door Window.
PoUce said the glass of J<lhnnie's U -
quor Store ln Corona dtl Mv, owned
by Cook. was broken by a "heavy,
unk.nowll iostrum«lt." They Jogged Jt
.,, • rooUne ~H o( malicious
mltdde1 .
INSmE TODAY
"Summfr Lfghtnfng" ho•
struck ot UU W t1tmlmttr Com-
m unit~ T"cCJtfr fl'l the form of
o" origf nol pla 11 written b II
DAILY PILOT st4fftr To m
Tftut. Tht drama 11 noiet.OCd on
lf'Urtamm«n& pagt, 21, today.
~-
I DAJ\.Y ,ILOT
Laguna Man
Ar.tested
\ .
In Shootµlg
A Lacuna Beach JUD Wal arrested
Sunday night on suspicion of sboo&c
anotMr maa In the face twke 1'Wl •
&as gun that ·;ns pellets.
Police booked Gary Celli, 23. ol JUO
Mouatalnview Roed It 1M C()Qlllty jail
on aQIJlllclon of, ..aalt wtth a 4Mdl1
weapon.
He was a.tieged to have fired two
• pellets into tbe face of Val lffa(:
wc.odlaDd, at, ol .J..a Pueolll. WoodlUd
was given med1cel ir'eatment l.Dcl11Cllng
stitcbea for wounds "1' the left cheek
~d chin. police said.
Police set. Davidllrow'I aad the ln·
cident occvred at the rt1ideoce of
Cbariet J. Hoitt. 1711 T.mtM Hills
Drtve, dUl1DC a perty.
Brown 11\d CeD1 wallled Oft?' the
Woodlaad who was mix~ a drink
behind ttie bar· and Hild, "you're a
rood lookin2 IUY· you doft't deserve
this wom111~· ·
· Ht is alle&ed to have tben fired tm
1WJ t'ODtllntn~ capsules Into the
victim'• flCt a diltlnce of 11 in·
ctiea. ·
• CeW WU arrnted last year ln coo
nect1oa wtth a •.ooo ~ Bea.ch
jade theft wbleb l..al1m" Beach police
Jnv~.
}>db laid cblrtM apllllt cem are
1ti!l pendinC ln Superior Coart.
Brown said pOlf Cfi will aeek a com·
plalnt today oa the new cbarae.
---Kej eeteitMate
Held in Burning
~Of Wife's Home .
A Costa Mesa man was jailed on
suspicion of arson Saturday night after
hia ex-wife told police be forced open a
window cd threw burning material
into her home.
Price T. Pienall, 54. of 2118 Maple
St., WU •till held in Cort.a Mesa city
Jail today, police aald.
Mrs. Ona 0. Cardwell. of 331 E.
Walnut St., told Officer Ly n n
Damerow the IU!pect came to her
apartment and threatened to burn it
down beoaUJe their maniate was
recently annulled.
She aaJd Piersall talked throul)I a
window after being refuted ad-
mittance, then Mt ftre to 11\e curt.ins.
which he threw ooto a bed, damaging
two blanket!.
"Dear, yow-boo.se i8 buminl." Mrs.
C.wdwell quoted the IUlplCt • saying.
Damage wu estimated at P>.
Summer School
Principals Listed
Summer school p rincipal
aaatinmenta haw been made for
Newport-Mesa UnJ.tled ~District.
Twelve of 2S elementary llCboola
will be uaed for the summer eesslon
JUDl 24 to July 2S with six princtpala
takl:ng two ICboola each. 't b •
aallpmenta:
Norm Stllhrtll -Kaber 1t1d
~ke -TeWlnkM and Mesa
Verde.
Robert Mlier -Davis and Prertdio.
Willard Reece -Enatgn and Un-
coln.
ohn Cue -Harbor View and
Newport Helthts.
Ra.)pb Fr~ta1 -Rea and Wlllon. HlCb school summer eesslon will ex-
tend throutb Aut. t With Jury
McClellan as prlnclpal .at Corona de-1
Mar and Floyd Harryman u prindpal
at Ettancla.
Clarence Nedom will be ln charae of
pre-school programs at Whittier.
Pomona and Harper schools.
DAILY PILOT
............ c ...
It.wt H. W"4 .........
n.,... KM'tf ... n.-. A. Mw~l11e ....... ...,.,
J.,.. '· C.11111• ............ Cltr ....
Jetli: R. C.ley P11I Nl1M11 ....... ...,,,,, .......... D4redW ................
2211 'W..t ..,.._aw.
...... Mihtta P.O.'-1tn tUU
~OMc ..
(•'9 ---· -........ '""" u.-1Mc111 m ,.,.... •-
""""1ftfllll leldl' -... '''"'
I
They're Cmuing to Town
Ellie and Lovie, entertainers with James Bros. Circus. pauae to
wrinkle their brows -and all the rest - in contemplation of their
show Tbursd~at Oran2e Countv Fairl!rounds in Costa Mesa. Orange
Corast lJons Club members are bringing the circus to town, for 1 4
p.m. matinee and an 8 p.m. evening performance. Tickets are •2 for
adults and $1 for children. Animals, acrobats, jugglers and clowns
wifl be f ea tu red.
""" Police -Seeking Witness
In Auto Collision Death
~lice are aeekiillg witnesses to a
head-<lll auto crash early this morning
wttldl claimed the life of a Long Beach
man near the Sheraton-Beach Inn m
Huntington Beadl.
The victim was identified as Albert
M. Gosselin, 40. of 4171 Rose Ave .
Long Beach. Police said he was dead
on arrival at Huntington Intercom·
munity Hospital following t.be 1 :41
a.m. crash on Pacific Coast Highway.
Just five months ago, an elderly
man was killed at nearly the same
spot, Wlb.ile att~pting a Jell turn lnto
the Inn.
Today's accident occurred when a
west-bound car driven by Tony Dean
Bales. 18, of 367 Sunrise Ave .. Placen·
tia> crashed head--0n into Gosselin's
east-l>our!d car, police said.
Bales was treated at Huntington
~rcommurtlty Hospital for minor in·
juries and then released.
Investigators request that the driver
of a red ford pickup truck who
witnessed the accident contact them
at the Huntington Beach police station.
The wi~ was east-bound on
* * * Orange Cyclist
Killed in Crash
An Orange motorcycllsl died Fri·
day afternoon when his machine
sma$hed Into a car on Orange-Olive
Road near Greenleaf Street
Dead at Anaheim Memorial Hos-
pital was' Charles Robertson. 18. of
819 Whitecap St. Tbe accident was at
l : 18 p. m., according to the Orange
Police Department.
The car lrwolved in the accident was
driven by Carol A.rm Barns, 23, of
2017 Blaooberd St., Anaheim.
Donald Seymour,
Bank Official,
Succumbs at 43
Graveside aervtces wiU be beld Wed·
neaday at 3:30 p,m. for Donald D.
Seymour. vice-president of the United
States National ~ant of Cotta Mesa.
who died Saturday at Cedars of
Lebanon Hospital. Los Angeles, after a
lengthy Illness. He was ~.
Former pru1denl ol the Coeta Mesa
Downtown Businessmtlt'I Auoclation.
Mr. ~ymOIU' was a member ai the
Rocary, c.o.ta Mesa hrtina Corn·
mtulon, Harbor Boys Club. 0rlft1e
County Cout Anoclation ud WU
treuww ol th•·Marc:b of DUIM1.
Survivors Include bis wile. Beu, of
the family home at 810 Aldean Place.
Newport Beach: twin d1ulbtc'$,
CberJl and caro&; a 100, 0.Yid, a.U of
the bome : bis mother. Mrt. Benie
8eJ1DOU,r of Buur.,ont and a brothtt,
John, of l'\illerton.
Burial will be at Pacific Vltw
Memcirl&t Park, Corona del Mar. Ar·
rapmmtt aN W>der th. dlrecdon of
BeD Broadway Mortuar'1, Co.\& Mua.
I
Pacific Coast Highway and made a u-
turn following the accident into the
Sheraton-Beach where he requested
the desk clerk contact police.
Police Invade
Easter Love-ins;
90 Ai·rested .,
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Po 11 c e
ralds on hippie Easter Sunday love·ins
netted about 90 narcotics arrests, with
officers encountering crowd hostility
at Elysian Park.
Police estimated the .Elysian Park
crowd at 3.600 to 4,000, and said
anollhirr 5,000 hippies were gathered at
Tapia Park.
Police Lt. Billy E. Sanderson. field
commander at the Elysian Park
disturbance. where 35 persons were
taken in. said narcotics officers en-
countered crowd harassment every
tin.e an arrest was made. with rocks
a.nd bottles being thrown at police.
"It got to tbe poln.t that a police car
could not drive through the petrk." he
said. "One black-and-White car !lad
the windows broken."
Vacation Arrests
Nearly Double
P1·evious Yea r
Laguna's Easter vaeation arrests
nearly doubled last year's but it seem·
ed more a result of strict enforcement
than wild Easter rites.
"I think it was orderly," said PoUce
Chier Harry Labn,w. "The klds seem-
ed to behave themselves In pretty
good shape."
Labrow said there were 101 arrests,
18 females and 13 males. compared to
56 during Easter vacKlon 1967. Most
were misdemeanors .
They broke down this way: 29
curfew violations, 8 drunk in public. 15
minors in posses!lion or aJcohol, 15
sleeping in autos or on the bcacb. 3
possession of narcotics or dangetou!
dn>, 4 drunk driving, 1 drunk 1n
auto. 1 furnishing alcohol to 1 minor, 5
petty thert. l indecent exposure. 3
btrglary, 8 trespassing. 4 mailcioU~
mischief. 1 vehkle code violation. 3 on
warrants.
Negro Author Talks
Nonviolent Takeover
NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) -N..,-o
autilor Leroi Jooea sa:y1 be is con·
vinced Nearoes can tab over the cit1
by u.aine oonvioimt mUIDI loch u tbe
ballot
Jones. o.i bail awaIUD1 8Pl>M} oo a
gun po11wion conviction aa.nunil'I
lrom &all summer's not, said s.da.y,
"We'v. come to the coochMb:I ~
the cit)' l.s out1 allYWa:t, tMt •• oen take It With balJoea."
l
0.. .maa w.u Injured and thrH
other• aJTested on drun} charges
Saturday _ nllbt when an 18-foot
runabout ran airow>d &t Balboa '1
Wedge ~&cb DIM the Newport
Harboc west jetty.
Attracted by police and ambulance
1lren1, more than 500 pertODI swarm·
ed onto the beach area to watd'l the
rescUe of vidim1 and 1atva1e of the
boat by Harbct" Department and Coast
Guard VIU8ll.
Hospitalized ·with • broteo hip wu
AMo Booth of 2044 Wllson Drive, San·
... Ana.
TWO ARRESTED
Anelted on suaplcioo of being drunk
in public were David Freeman, 21, ol
1134 W. Richland Ave., Santa Ana;
R*rt W. Lewis, 22, ol nl E.
Cbeetnut Ave., Santa Ana, and Everett
H. Alford, 38, ol 3ll Poimettia St.,
Corona del Mar.
Police said Freeman bad to be
physically restrained before be could be placed in the squid car.
Booth wu injured whtll'I be tried to
step out of the l>oat when It weot in the
surf and the boat rolled over onto him.
The Harbor Department aaJd the boat wu regiltered to the Orange County
Three Escape
$20,000 Blaze
In Valle v Home
•
Early Easter Sunday morning Foun·
lain Valley tiremen1fought what they
said was one ol the worst home fires
in the city's history.
Every room except one in tbe home
of Richard F. Mangan at 187'23 San
Antonio St.. waa involved, Fire Capt.
Louis Burkhart said today.
Loss to the home and contents was
estimaied at more than *22.000.
The family dog's barking alerted
Tommy Mangan, 5. and bis sistu,
Casey, 4, to the fire about 1:45 a.m.
They ran into the room wh~ their
mother was sleeping and awakened
her. Their father was at work at the
time.
Mrs. Managan tried to break out a
bedroom wio<k>w bLM. fa1Jed and ran lo
a neighbor's house for help.
Two neighbors, P. F. Brown of 10412
Parakeet Circle a.nd Dltle Boone of
18709 San Aotoolo, broke the master
be~oom wiDdow to remove the
children.
The youngsters and their mother
were treated for smoke Inhalation at
Huntington lnt.ercommuntty Hospital
and released Sunday morning.
Mrs. Mangan also suffered burns on
her hands.
Firemen said, a smoldering cl&arette
apparently started ~ tin in a living
room couch.
Women Discuss
Drugs, Hippies
On the assumption that hippies and
the use of drug& go hand in band, the
Woman's Civic League ol Newport
Beach Will preseot films de&ling with
both topics at 7:30 p.m. Wecmtsday at
the cafeteria o( Mariners School.
Program chairman Mrs. Warren
Poltra.s said Newport Bffdl Assfstant
Police Chief Mm-lll Duncan will be on
hand to answer ques~ and dlsplay
samples ol Jlla!"ijuana for those who
have never seen il
The public ~ invited to attend the
free program. Furttler iokrmation
can be obtained. by calliDi Mrs.
Poi.tr as at 548-1793.
YOUR WATCH~
• CIMnM • OfW • Mlwt.I
s5~
Recreational Eaterp1.ltl Corp. of Buch near 1ACun.a Bead!. !!r:S.Ana. It WU ~ ~ated by , P!~ UR. J)y a ~ boat 8l1d
Alford told the Harbor ~tut llN>~t td ~ HarbOr ~t
that be tbouitit tMy bad ihadt-e -"tf'l1"I ~ fttlte, 28, ol W92 Purdy
turn into the Je~. but actually were St, and Joan L. Sparcidi, 'rl, of Mal
travaUnc par.U.1 to tbe welt jetty on Truk A,e., botll of Westmlnlter. and
U.. oeaan aide. Thi boat hit tbe beach G T "'--an S1 ot 14m u-.. '" about . f .. t from the rocb, 0
• ~-t I H"t"ll ~ ••
Garden Grove.
llOi\T DlaPA'IUllD The boat was s-alv.aged by the
Tbe &rbor" Dtper~ dilpltcbed Harbor Department.
a mall Plll'Qt boll to tM ICtlle and
U'4I C0Mt G8lrd 1tDt tbe CUU. Point
Divide. Tbe11oat,... ,i:DaUJ towed otr Dontanyi}Je T rial the ~b ..... tbe Rarf>or Depart· ment placed a .. frooa tbe Point
Dlvlde . .alJNld tllie ~ craft.
A flffh ,._ ii _. .... •9' kten· =.! .r~·v~ to~d poUca..... ... jqt lmld>ed.
~ «ll UD. IDd tbe sroaip bad
tdlln It. flO CeU"M cm a tM drive.
'nley Wt Cdd'm at I p.m. Anderton
sald tile blbccd-ou.Cbolrd moflon con-
ked out ju« belarl by hit 1be surf.
Aladenon ... llOt .-rut.td.
In another lletlead boMina mlshap,
tnree fhhermetl were re.cued Suoday
after tbeir IS.foot outboard capsized three quarters of a mile otf El Morro
VIETNAM • • •
durina the enemy'• lunar new year .,f.
fenelve.
Near Khe Scmb. an enemy company
attacked two companies of the U.S. lst
Air Cava~ Division. but t h e
Americans repulsed the assault after
15 minutes. Eight U.S. soldiers were
killed and six w~.
Tht: Khe Sanb airstrip was hit by six
rr.ortar and rocket roun~ Sunday
morning, two mmut~ after 6,000
Easter eggs arrived by helicopter for
the garrison. Th.rte Marines were
wounded.
''They say the siege of Khe Sa.nh is
over.'' said Marine Pfc. Frink Fauer
of Easton. Pa .. who was oo the strip
w11en the bE11"1'age bit. "Who are they
trying to kid?"
U.S. bombers 9truck a highway
bridge and a railway bridge 169 miles
north of the demilitarized zone Suo·
day, the U.S. Command uld. It was
the 11th st;-:>jght day that U.S.
bombers sl;lyed below the 19th
Parallel in the cuN.lled air campaign
against North Vietnam.
U.S. bombers flew 143 missions over
the North Sunday, the aet~Dd largest
number tb.io! year and only ooe less
than the H4 flown Jan. 8.
A total of 16 bridges were attacked
and three were reported down~ or
Frora P .. ~ J
KOREA ...
wounded.
The U.N. co~ reported
another Incident lut ~)day in which
four American JUf&l'd• bettled 15 North
Korean guards in • fiat fllht at Pan-
munjom. A spokesman laid the
Americans were on routine duty at tbe
truce village when the)' W'e r e
uaaulted by the <:;ommu.n.ista.
The fisticuUs lasted aevenl minutes
but m ooe wu Hrioualy mrt, the
9P0kesman said.
The four Am~Ticans involved in the
tight were iden~led as Lt. Cmdr.
Stanley Pislronld, of Wilket-Barre,
P.a.; Sgt. John Caskey, of Augusta,
Ga.; Sgt. Ronald Abigail of Baltimore,
and PFC. John Broda of New York Ci-
ty. Tbe spokesman uld the Com·
muni&ta started fighting w i t h
Plskorski, Caskey and Abigail and
then attacked Broda wblll ht was tak·
ing pJctures of the fight.
Prepared for Jury
LOS ANGELES ~I) -Final
arguments were expected to eiJid today
In the retrial of aCCflled dl8d killer
Anthooy David DontanvUJe.
Dontanville, 3.5, ls accused of killing
CecJlla Renee Barlli, 7, and ber sister,
Roberta Ano, 6, last Aaa. t. The case
was expected to go to the a&veo-man,
five-woman jury after final ln.struc-
tiooa by Superior Cow1 Judge Mark
Brandler.
damaged. U.S. Pi.lots alto reported
dc.troying 12 trucb aod tbree radar
sites and touching oU ~ sustained
fires.
North Vietnam ch&rged that U.S.
planes "repeatedly violated" air space
near Hanoi and other areas lRrfb--uf
the 21st Parallel Sunday. It ~lly
~efcrred to reconnaissance flight&.
When President Johnaon anooon~
the ban oo bombing curtailment above
the ~ parallel oo March 31, mili-
tary sour~ in Saigon 58.id that U.S.
planes would continue reconnaissance
and photographic mlsa1ons all over
North Vietnam up to the Chineee bor·
der.
But civilian sources ln Saigon n.id
today that Johnson also hltlted all U.S.
air reconnabsaoce above the 20th
parallel shortly aft.er and the ban was
in effect for 10 days. The sources said
U.S. pilots resumed the reconna.is·
sance missioru around Hanoi and Hai-
phong about three days aeo aft.er the
military decided it needed to know
what the N«th Vietnamese were do-
ing.
A U.S. Command spokesman. asked
about the range of reconnaissance
flh!hls, said he could not comment.
Flll fight.er-bombers raided North
Vietnam for the third successive day
since they resumed combat mlssJOns
Friday. The swing-wing jets had been
grounded since March :.> after two of
the "6 mlllloo planes w~ lOlt during
Wom~n Injured
As Motorcycle
Hit by Car
.A Trabuco Canyon woman wu in-
Jur~ tn Laguna Beach Sunds.y when
the motorcycle on which she was a
paeceogier waa rrock by a car.
Sandra Laschiver, 28. was treated ct.
South Coast Community Hospital and
released.
Police S,t. David Brown said the
motorcycle driven by her husband,
Alan. 25, collided witb a cor driven by
Jacqueline M. Tatum. tl, of t88 Can·
ym Acre.I Drive.
Brown aatd the era.sh occurred near
~ municipal parklnt lot 1n the 200
b&ock ot Broadway. Mn. LMch.iver
WU ttJrown from the motorcycle,
0
OMEGA
Your Onugo
Sale• & Smnu
Agney
FIEE
$1.99
Now 2 Great Storti To s.rta Yoo
...-.......... ....,,,...,.. Cllml
C91m llACM•'9'Mll
.. ..._ .... """"...,... IUQt COSTA Mal • ........ tn.IM1
0,. Mia. Tlwrs., Pr1. TH t ,....
•
,...
TO
"' '"' """
I/
I
I
I
nd
:nt
dy
181
t1a
tt.,
na1
lay
ler
ing
er,
~se
an,
UC·
irk
'ted
dar
oed
J.S.
ace
1 nr
lUy
etd
ove
iili·
J.S.
flee
iv er
)Or·
laid
J.S.
20th
was
said
~is·
=Jal·
the now
do-
ked
.nee
It.
Jrth
day
Ions
~n
o of
:ing
I
I in·
rhen
a.s a
:d DI.
and
the
.ind.
n by
Can·
near
200
liver
t.
n
J
i'
I
I
I
I OAILY .. ILOT I .........
T·DAY REMINDER -This is the prettiest memory jog you're likely
to get all day that this la T-day; tu forms mu.st be in mail and POSl·
marked before midnidll Michaele Cannon. Miss Costa )f esa. is among
the hundreds alone Orange Cout who will just make il
Tax Deadline at Midnight
Midn.ieht tonight 1a the deadline for
filing 1987 income tax returns and the
local branch of tbe ln~rnaJ Revenue
Service at 2024"-W.-Broadway, Santa
Ana will c1oee at •:30 p.m.
P«sons whose returns are not
pose.marked by mid(Mgbt will be
ptta!ized five percem of the taxes due
moothly up to a maximum of 25 per·
cent.
The IRS estimated that 18 million
Americans-wntted until this past
weekend to file their returna and that
at least 5.2 million will file today.
For information or tax assistance,
c.i1.I 54 7-0721.
French Teachers Tour UCI
Five noted Frenchmen, heads of
French universities, visited UC Irvine
Friday while on ·a tom-of U.S. educa-
tional institutions.
The reasdn for their stopping at UCl
was to viait the pioneering computer
facility.
The French educaton and their
wives spent three hours on campus,
lunching with chancellor -and Mrs.
Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. and chancellor
and Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy of
UCLA.
'Ibey arrived by helicopter from San
Fernando Valley State College and
departed for La Jolla.
The OD&-WeU tour d U.S. eampuM!S
is sponsored by l!>e Institute of
International Education, a United Na-
tions agency. •
Graduate diviJion dun R a 1 p h
Gerard and professors Robert Gordon
and Henry Weinberg showed the
visitors around UCI and explained ttie
computer program. • • ·
The French visitors are Dr. Jean
Roche. recteur. Univers.ite de Paris;
Dr. Robert Mallet, recteur, Academie
D'Amiens; Dr. Pierre Jacqu1not,
directeur gener.ai de la Recherche
Scientltique; Dr. Robert Dav r i l ,
recteur. Academie de Nice, end Dr.
Alain Barre.re. doyen, Faculty of Law
and Economics.
Bei• Sides C'~tl
Bickering
'fo ·Peril Talks?
LONDON (UPI) -Boeh 'ftltlrn
led Oomm1lllllt dlplomata f..-.d
MondQ tMt bicbrin& about a aJte for
talb .....,_n Haooi and WuhinP>a
rm&t>t meen the collapse ol a VietMm
puce mMtlq.
Open Mid qu.iet ~a!s have been
IM1led from boUI dd .. of jbe lroG Cur~
t.ai.n fOf' a speedy aireemeot on a
motually acceptable site in crder to wert a poajble breakdown ol .,_ re-
cent peace ialtiative.
No turCher procresa on nam.tnc a
atte was reported M:coday. ,
DiplotmCic .~ said both aanoI
and Washington bad their reasons for
beiDc cnoo.sy llbout tbe place where
they will make the first cootada con-
cerning a po11lble f\all·scale peace COO·
feNnce.
The Ulli t.ed states does not went to
find itself io hostile slJITOUtldJal&s.
where tta communications are m.
adequate or insecure.
Haooi is worried lest it will be sur·
rounded by a ereat deal of publicity
because it baa built up in advance any
confrontation at a conference table
w:itD the Americaos as a major Com-
muni!t victory.
Hanoi fears above all that 1llD'J con·
cession It mey have to make would be
publicized aod would result in a }011 ol
face.
The Communists, for in.stance, may
be ~ to make some reciprocal
&esture for a complete American bom-
blnr paUM in North Vlet.n.am. But 1bey problbly would pull back if
such a move were to become publicly
known at aa eerly stage of the negotia-
tions.
The current difficulties ov« cboos·
lng a Site for the Vietmm peace IOUD·
dings recalled the situatiOo Which
prevailed in Eu~ tturing the worst
phases oMhe cold war.
When Russia and the west agreed in
1954 to meet to discuss the possibility
of negOO.at.ing an end to ttie Frenoh
Indo-Chlna war, Berlin was approved
as the plaoe for the talks. But to Ja\'e
face and prestige ttie coofeteoce
alternated daily between West and
East Berlin, with two different con-
ference centers established in tbe two
parts of the divided city.
The troubles over a meeting site
give a foreta$te d what may be in
st«e, once the talks ge-t under way.
The Communf~ are great sticklers
regarding the e!tablishment of a con-
ference agenda. The agenda's ptk.as·
ing is a key point in conference
prepaiations. It took several weeks of
long daily meetings $c> es.tabliab an
agenda for the 1955 east-west con-
ference oo an Austrian settlemeqt.
When ~ Communists say they want
to meet 'to di10UM a bombing ~e'',
tbey proceed from the firm asaump-
lion that this phrUU!c i m p ll es
American advance acctpt.lnee of auc:G
a bombine pause.
On put experience, the fO!'tbcomJ.n&
talQ therefore will require the most
careful a.nd diligent preparadoos.
Diplomata tsUrnate they might extend
over moatha rather than weeks.
Pessimitta .mticipate it m:ay take a
year Ol' mOl'e to reach a aeWement,
even if HIDOi already bas decided to have ooe.
Family of Three
Rescued From
Sinking Cruiser
Lifeguards and surfers rescued a
Santa Ana family of three from their
overturned 16-foot cabin cruiser which
turned turtle Sunday at noon just in·
side the 23rd Street beach surf line in
Huntington Beach.
Lifeguards said William Waters, 24.
Of 4109 5th St., his wife, Patsy, 25, end
daughter Nadine. 2, were on a maiden
cruise in their new outboard when the
engine stalled.
The craft drifting toward shore flip-
ped while Waters wa& attempting to
start to engine.
Mrs. Waters and Nadine were sit·
ting In the bow of the boat when it
overturned. Nearby surfers Mike
Holmes, 17, Rubin Chavira, 18, and
Paul Robinson , 18, all of Compton,
rescued the trio.
After being checked at Huntington
lt?tereomrnunity Hospital. the family
was sent home. Lifeguards pulled the
swamped boat to shore where it was
later hauled away by Waters.
Workers Walk Out
On Phone Comp any
NEWARK, N. J. CUPJ) -More than
10,000 telephone workers today struck
New Jersey Bell Telephone, forcing
management and supervisory person-
nel to man switchboards and other
jobs.
The strike was called at 7 a.m. by
the International Brotherhood of Elec-
trical Workers Union (IBEW), Local
827, AFL-CJO. nipresenting 8,300 in-
stallers and linemen.
...... ~. ;....,. J ~. J.-...0
Sixty Years Apart
They may be standing back to back. but 14-year-old Sue Keiser. in
her 1968 model bikini, and Mrs. Sol Millstein of Seal Beach, in authen-
tic suit of 1908 furnished for Seal Beach Woman·s Club fashion show
bv Salvation Armv. are 60 years apart in beachwear.
Leary to Face P sychiatric Test
LSD advocate Timothy Leary, who convicted at Laredo Tex .. in 1966 M
wintered this year in Laguna Beach, two marijuana. chargeg. He receiv~d a
bi.s been ordered to appear April 22 30->:ear s_entenoe ~ a $30,000 fme, . . . which will be reviewed after the ex· for a psyc1uatnc analysis at tile aminatlon.
feeler&! medical ceoter tn Springfield, U.S. Judge Ben C. Connally. who
Mo. presided at the trial. signed the order
Leary, 47. of Millbrook, N. Y., was Friday.
Ole! Spain's fine handwoven kid sling is now at Buffums'
•
Jast ""9t )40l'W alld tar ' mer. A srm1 that's fi;rt. airy, ecol and comfortable
In boot, Wbttt, areen, ye flow er oranae, You'll like the squared toe, low
...., lld.111 calrlltfari • ~. h strap Is WOYen as pert of the 1Dp cf the shoe. Just 11.ai
~h
•\ '3EtJa11
I
•
mS'
..
11 f ASHfOM ISLAND • • •
'
MONDAY .. THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 OTH!R'DAYS 10:00 TIU.S:JI
..
DAll.Y PJlOT . Moncla.t, April lS, 1968
Bad B•rlJed Opinions
c~ .,, -. Olllr ..., ,....,
::· H.,ry Dn.nport, 20, ol North
• , Hollywood, just wouldn't go away
and mind his own business, accord-
,· · ing to two police officel'1. They said
· • they ignored him when be drove
his car alongside their squad car,
rapped on the window and shouted
• • seven I obscene remarks. But when
be got out of hi! car and allegedly
fired a shot at them u they started
to drive away, they stX>pPed and IT·
rested him on suspicion of assault
wUh a deadly weapon. Davenport
•. reportedly told them, "l tried to get
. . . your attention because I want to go
to jail. 1 need help ,..th 10me men-
. tal probleme." P.S., Be got hil wish. •
Runyon
Leaps
WASHINGTON (UPI) -D am on
Runyon Jr., .,.. ol the flamboyant
newsman and author ol the Roaring
Twenties, Id to biJ death from a p~k
bridge here SUoday. Police said it ias
suicide .
Runyon, 48, less successful than bis
father, wu dud on arrival .at
Georgetown Univer11lty Hospital 15
minute• after be pl~ged from the P
Strut Bridie in Roet cnet Park.
police said. ma 52-foot.fall into • shallow creek
w.a. witnessed bJ ICU'es of people
loungin& at the "P su.et Beach," a
popular gathering 'J> l a c e for
Walhington's hippie community.
1be junior Ruoyoo was a cor·
respondent for t..be weekly W aabington
Examiner at the time of his deaf.it. He
previ<lully worked for a number of
newspapers, inclMing the late New
Y art-Herald Tribune ard tta suc·
ceAOl', the W<rld Jouma:J 'f'nl>une,
and the old lnte'national News
Service.
Runyon, lilte bis father. had barbed
opinions about practically everything.
He was particularly critical of
uiwspaper writers and even more so
~ editcn.
''My dad was originally a
Junior
Dia th
sportnTittJ'," Monce .aid. "Even to-
day the sport& department ls tbe •ly
s.l&ce in ~ newspaper Where you can
show any talent."
OC editon, be aald: ''I doo't lmow
what rnak~ a good 'editor. You baVe•
to have empathy witti people. There's
a cert4tn amount of bastard in "er/
editor. l used to be ~,Prima Oonna. But
after some time on the other side al
·the desk, 1 sbut up. I don't arpe
anymore."
He blamed the d~ath of the Herald
Tribune on the lacl<' of Jood writers.
•:we copldn" finct.aiiy good writ.era', so
we trained copy boys. Unfortunately,
they all became_ ~tors. Then we bad
tbe prlllters' strlkej That killed 111. •• '
Runyon, whole 'la8t major mtgn.
meot with the ,Examiner was coy.-Jng
Uie civil dia<rdt!rs in the capital;,lut
week, said recenlly newspaperiq wu
not .as much fun u . it used to be,
"Ws tough to ·be a newspaperma
bere' in Washingtar. Mocrt of ~ ...,
~from knowing J*.P)e. nee.~a
1H> hllltlor here now. 1b.i.s i&n't a fuiaD.J
administration." . . .
When he rell to hii death Sunday
afternoon, his press card was tied
around rus nec.k.
I AB.A President Claims
I
News Media Unhampered
Fra-nk Sinatra Jr., will repla~ Dean
Martin Jar 10 1tucce1rive week3 this
111tmmer witli an liout's show of I u"
and frolic. Yoitno Sirnitra. who aaitis
mat•Jrity, savvy and. cnnficJence evert/
year, is 1iow 24 and will rtm the show
Pntitled "Dean Martin Present3 the
Gold Diggers," with the aid of the
beautiful itnd tate'l'lted Joey Heather-·
ton. • 1t was a costly shot that Ju nes
M.rtin, 25, of Green River, Wyo.,
fired at the moose head hanging ov-
er a local bar. He shot himself in
the lei while trying to rebolster his
pistol •.•. 1114 he was fined $150
by an unsympathetic judge !or fir·
ing a weapop in a public gathering
place. • Linde LeCf1ir, 20, a ~opoomore
at Barnard College in New York,
faces po1111ible expulsion or suspen-
sion for allegedly giving a false off·
campus address so that she could
tnOYe in with. her boy friend. The
boy friend wu identified as Peter hhr, a junior at Columbia U. •
An outf'aged citittn summo.
td two police of fictn to Santa
Monica Beach to arrest a 11otmf1
lad11 who tDG.f froUcktng m the
1Urf and sunbathmg ••• *'t tht
nude. After a l>TU!f chase acron
the sand, tohich br~ght drowst1
vacationers bolt UJ}right, offio-
tn o!fered the 24·year·old wom-
an a blanket. "l am a child of
God and 1 have gif t& to show,"
&he said, spuming the cowring.
The woman, whose identity tOCJ8
not disclo8ed, t003 taicen to Lo&
Angelu·USC Medical Center Jar
p111chiatric e:camination.
HARTFORD, COM. (UPI) -The
president of the American Bar
A811ociatioo aaid today there ig nothing
in the ABA lair trial and frc1? press
iitand:ard~ to inhibit the news media
Crom "reporting rully to the public the
facts or crime and law enforcement."
Representatives of the media have
charged that the standards adopted
two months ago by the ABA house oC
delegates in Chicago would severely
restrict public information about
crime.
Speaking today before the Con·
necticut Ber Assodation . ABA Presi·
dent Earl F. Morris -eaid, "claims
ma<M that the standards would 'curb
coverJlle of triaJs' or 'deny to tJie
public infurmation about ctime al\d
21 Persons Hurt . -
In COney Island
Subway Rioting
NEW YORK (UPI) -At least 21
penons were injured Sunday night
during a Coney Jaland-to-Ma.lbattan
subway rampage by wbite and Negro
youths angered by being turned away
from the famed amusement park.
At least 42 persona, mostly aged 12
to 18, were arTe1ted on charges rang-
ing from juvenile dtilnquency and
diaderly conduct to f e l o n i o u s assault. .
The troubft began when hundreds of
~out.ha were turned .away from the
Coney Island amuseme11t P•k on
grcuncb It already was jam.med by an
Euter Sunday capacity crowd.
Part oC a crowd estimated at 3.000 to
5,000 surged through streets around
the park, blocking traffic a n d
amaahlog liquor and jewelry store
windows.
Some Of the youths ran into nearby aubwa, stations smastUng train win-
dows and J.igbts.
law enforcement' limply •e not
true."
Morriii said the a t a n d a r d 1 ,
formulated by an advisory committee
headed by Justice Paw C. RuTdon 0C1
I lhP Supreme Judicial Court o r1 l\fassachusetts. "do not impose any I
restricltons on the news media
themselves ; they apply only to1 lawyers. judges and law enforcement 1
officers."
He said the objective of the
guideUnes was "to eliminate at its
source the release of information by
tawy'en and ln enforcement offlcials
that may prejudice fair trial, without
prevefltilJg the news. ,piedJa from
reporting fully to the public the. facts
of crim6' and )aw enforc9~l '' ~.
. The liar bas a duty, Mehis \0
protect t~ public against ~ Cela•\n
. jUsticc an1Hbe expense or ~sa'-JI
convictions resulting from ,claims
prejudicial -publicity. He said th~ U.S.
Supreme Court in the last decade bas
overturned six convictions on this
ground, and "the most familiar recent
eiramples are the Dr. (Sam) Sheppard
and Billie Sol Estes cases."
Morris said that under the Reardon
guidelines, lawyers and poiloe otnciala
will continue to "~leaae for -publica·
tion all ol the essential facts about
criminal arrests and procedures
necessary _, keeping the public in·
formed." He ea.Id this includes ar·
restl, cbarge1, circumstances of ar·
rut& end pbyaical evidence seized.
'1Potlentially p r e j u d i c i a l" m..
fOl!l:Dation w{lich will oot be released,
he \aid, includes prior C!'iminal
record; existence or contents of con ..
fe ssions; relUlb of tests or op!nloos ol lawyers about the trial.
The ~aiob will not interfere wrth
media iepoirting of criminal m.
vestigatibbt in progress. exposing of.
fictal cotTUplion or crtticiz.ing courts
or law enforcement. Morris said. Be
added Qiat they wiD not enlas'ge tbe
contempt power ol the courts •
restrict "in uy way the reporting ol
everything that occurs in open court."
Spring ·Fair Blooms
W eatlter Bureau Keeps W at,er Shelved 5 Days
l lohl Vtr•ablt •I ... "itl'I •"41 ..,......
,,... l!oll,, 111 !fie ~ ._.., ,,_.
,__ ~t .... -... ....
dllu4b .... ""''"' -l" ,,. •fter· -v .. ..,_..,., "'-elllre • • n t • d
ffwn ....... " .. " ....... '2. ,,.. ...-....._....,,.. -" ....,_, s-, 1t1...,, TW. .,......,
"'-' .................. St.II t..111. ., ..
"'" """ .... -....... ~,.-. u ._ ............... ~:n ,.,,,.. "'
................. '11'1•.111. » -... "'" '·"'· "", .......
.. .... 1:2' '"'· ..... 25 •"I.
LM e. "'-1'"'91 e, ,,_
1l •S
" " u s; ..• ,
II SI fl Jlo
53 A3 ~
1' •O .14
.. 3' .27
"' :it 611 3S
" l8 .30 ~ «S
l1 u
n " u '(I
113 11 lJ .,
., Jll .311 u I.lo
i.A " .IS 4t .,
111'1 ~· ,. $7
!II "' ti u ,, ~
oil 13
" " Al 6A ,, 4o4
~ '~ "" . 1' 4
Ill " Tf . ,.
7f Jf ..tS ,, 31 .n s n .. " n ,, 11
" "' "'' u .. 81 ~ JI : = . . ...,
" S1
" #I
time,
Pick the Pair! A 1968
FRIGIDAIRE JET ACTION WASHER
plus its Matching ··Dryer!
• <' .....
• 't
Even ·this Jo\Vtst priced
Frigidaire Jet Action Washer
has DPC for no-iron fabrics
• DurabAe ll'rela C•re. Gentt. WHMnt llCtier'I plus • coJd
• wat.r Cool·down hefp Dur1t;M Preee f9brics keep ttletr
no·iron PfGmise.
• Jet Action Atitator. Crutes1 currents that plun1• clothn
deep into ludsJ wmr for thoroucti west.me.
• 2 Jet·AWfl'J Rintec. Get rid of lint
and scum so thorouahly ttt.1'1 no
nftd for a lint tr1p.
•Jet-simple Mect1111i1"'. Ho bettt.
Ho .. ,.... No pulleys. No wontt..-It's
so dependable.
$168
IASY TUMS
411 lb. Freezer
"-'••u IC0.0..Y
Mom
~
FlllZll
STOllS
UP TO
404 us.
e 4 ShelvH, l ,,frig•r•t•-' e 4 Door shelves
with removable frents for
MH1uras just 30" wicle -idHI . for smeller
sp•ces. =· ~·~----·--·---·-·-· $171
Durable Press Care on this
budget -priced
Dryer, too
• Dureble Jl'ress Ca,... Jtropet temperlture t1lu1 tnl·
of-cycle cool·down brinp Dureb~ ,..,.., lttnis out
rMdy to wetr M put away without ifonln1.
• 2-cycle Timer. Select n.et dryin( minut.s.
• Ffnc mah O.cron lint tcreen. Ri1ht on the doot.
IASY
lDMS $118
Refrigerator-F teezer
FllC.tDAIH FIO$T-PIOOf
UN .. 11.ATO-Wmt 106 LI.
Siii TOP PlllZUf .
e '-ly .. 12.1 CL~ .. yet ..ty 10" wWel 9
, ..................... D..p $248 ................ ~ ... .
Shep , ..
'Iii ' p.m.
I'
I«. H ltM. 1' M"' S Mn U . ,, l''-------------------------------------------------------------~--..... ----__________ ,...,
.. . •
-_;;.,.. ~-·---=--.
• '
,.
Untied Pma bM'utieul
lsrllei cbarged tM Soviet
Union today 1rillb ~
the danget ot Middle Eaet
war by "famdnc ti:\e ac·
gre5sivenen" of the Arab
states.
The charge folloWed an
Easters~~ saw
the Mideaet ceasefire
viola.t~ anew by fighting
between lsraeH end J9rda·
nian troopa on the Jordan
River south· 0( the See of
Galilee.
The Israeli f o r e i I n
tn.Ulistry reacted to a Soviet
statement that Israel bas no
right tD pur$\Je Arab gutt·
rillas acro&oS the cea.sdire
line. The Soviet newspaper
Pravda said S a t u r d a y
"Israel's claim h> right of
pursuit against nations wag·
Ing a war of liberation ii;
reminiscent of Goebbels'
propagaoda.''
In Jerusalem. an Jsraeli
statement said ttiat if the
Soviet Uttioo were faithful to
her United NQtioos obllga·
t100 she would urge the
Arab stales to "arrive at a
true peace. based on
negotiation and peaceful
roelOStence and on coopera·
tion among all stz.tes in the
region ...
Instead. ' an I s r a e 1 i
spokesman said. the Soviets
have armed the Arab na·
tions with lettlal weapons
and given onesided support
to their politic&! positions.
In the Be1san Valley Sun·
..-.--· -·-·
day Jordanian -....
troops ... l(M ta tw «1J
~-~ ... A Jcnaman m il i ta r 1
apoknmae le Amma Mid
~ ~eel fired oa a
Jordanian oblervatiom polt.
1be t.aelis Nid the Jorda.
Iliana fired on a frontier
Klbbutl aod ..later on •
army plltril.
The lsr .. til reported OM
aok1ier ~ The Jcril.
nains laid they sustatned no
casualties.
Dr. GUDIHllr hrrioe. the
U.N. J*Ce ~. 8C'bedWed
men talkS ln bis effort.a to
bring a settl~ of June's
Mideast ••. He WU to con-
fer with the Israelis Tues·
day and ·with the Egyptiane
later in the week. The Arabs
were reported ready to take
the matter again belare ttie
U.N. General Assembly.
While the hostile annies
faced each othet", Cliristians
from many Jaods flocked to
many revered ma In the
Holy Land Sunday t o
celfl>rate the resurrection of RIOTING IN BERLIN -Policeman (left fore-
Cbrist. AU of Jerusaien, wu in ground) tries to hold back a mob of cross-carrying
Israeli hc:inds for the first students as a powerful jet from a water ca nnon is time in 19 ~ies. Roman
Catholics attell(!ed a pon· applied to the demonstrators from the right in down-
:~!calH~~ ~e ~eu ~cu~c: r~•--------------------
P~st.ants attended a
sunrise service in t h e
courtyard ol St. Andrew's
Church in the new RC'tioo of
Jerusalem.
town Berlin Sunday. About 3.500 rioters clashed with
police for the Cou~th consec;:utive day in a continued
protest against the shooting on April 11 of student
leader Rudi "Red" Dutschke.
\.
DAILY PILOT 1
Berlin.Students
" • I(
Battle Rolice
BERLIN (AP) -tatlst
students ordered a blockade
o( publisher Axel Springer's
newspapers today. raisirtg
the prospect or more trouble
after four days o( violeflt
demonstrations in West Ber-
lin.
The Socialistic Students
Associatfon-<>r SOS-said tl
woukl set up blockack>s in
West Berlin, F'rankfurt, Es·
slingen and Hanover.
Springer. continental Eu-
rope's biggest publisher. has
been a chief target of the
German New Lett because
o( his papers' antileft edi·
torial stand. Earl.ie.r block·
a<les led to clashes with po·
lice and considerable dam·
age to trucks and buildings.
In an effort to reconcile
lhe dissidents and the au·
thorities. other West Berlin
political and youth groups
announced plans for "make
a new start" rally today.
Leftist demonstrations be·
gan Thursday when SOS
leader Rudi Outschke wa s
shot and critically wound·
ed by a gunman on w~t
Berlin's main street, ttie
Kurfuerstendamm.
A demonstration on that
street Sunday eruplled mto a
clash betweefl .thousanda of
Dutscb.ke · s 11upportle:t'S and
hundreds of poU~. plunging
the traditional Eas~r p..
rade of strolling Berlinerl
and toorlsta tnio chaoe.
The demonstraton ~
ed "Nazis" at the police and
chanted "Ho · Ho -Ho. Chi
Mi nh" and "Rudi Dubicb-
ke." They huddled together
rathef' than retreating wtMa
water cannon opened up et
point-blank range.
In a three-hour melee, tn.
teftists [Jung stones, piecee
of metal, fruJt, fi.recraclm'I
and paint and tried to pile
barriers across the street.
At leasL thttie coostructioo
trucks were knocked over
The students retreated Oft•
I y when police advanced
with clubs swinglng. At least
one patrolman was knocked
down and beaten when he
m<>ved t.oo far in frollt.
Doctors reported t h a t
Dutschke. ?.8. was makinl
sahsfacrory progreea.
He· was bit by three re-
volver Shots. One ~ tn
his bra.in and was removed
in a lengthy operation. Thi
man accused o< shooting
Out:schlre, a houae painter
named Josef Badunam. 23,
was womdied by police and
also Is reported makini sat·
isfactory progrea. Police
said Bachmann t.old them
the slaying of Dr. Martin LU•
tber King Jr. ~ed blm m;io«. Outschlce.
Pope Paul May Act
As Peace Mediator
VATICAN CITY CUPl) -
Pope Paul VT decltted his
"absolute neutrality" in the
Vietnam conflict E a s t e r
Sunday and emer~ today
a"S a po&sible mediator in
pea<:e negotiations.
In a c~efully worded
Easter message to tihe
world, the Roman Cattiolic
Pontiff called far a ceasefire
and "honorable and lair''
neg1'bations tn end the Viet·
o.a.m war.
The pope aJso &ttts.sed hi5
"heartfelt affection" for all
natiom involved in the long.
bloody war. His words were
hea!'d by more than 200.0000
persons in St. P e t e r ' s
square fond by millions more
on television.
Pope Paul refrained from
s p e c i fically nominuling
himsell a mediator but left
the impression he would be
will.mg to serve.
Vatican observers said it
was the first time dley could
rerall the Pope making such
a declaration of impartiality
on the Vietnmn i ~ sue .
although he has avoided tak·
ing 11des in the confUct.
They said the P~nt!ff now
appeared able to aet as a
VN!blam mediator.
The appe&I for peace.
coupled with a new plea k>r
\11ctory over racism . was
o~ oC tile strongest in
Paul's five-year reign.
" ... Thole civilized world
C yearns I for tile difficult
peace in Asia wti.re it
s~nu the war can never
end. where the collls.ion o{
the greatest powers keeps
the world in suspense with
the anguished feiK of a
giga.ohc conflict w h 1 c h
would overwhelm all in
frightful ruin." the Pontiff
said
The f r a i I . 70.year-0ld
Pope. speak.i.Dg from the
balroay of St. Peter's as a
Ught ral..o ~u. said b• ~
"eagerly" oo t2ie proepects
DMD. ,.
of Vietnam pesc:e ta1b aod
expressed the wish ttie first
steps might lead soon "to a
happy ending." He called
for a ~ &eltlernent
which guaranteed freedom
to both N«i!b and Souttl
Vietnamese.
I In a c o m m e n t a r y
monitored in Hong Kong,
the Peking Peoples Daily
churged the Un61led States
has no intentioo of entering
intO meaningful pe~ talks
on Vietnam. The official
Red Chinese organ advised
the Vietnamese Commurjsta
to keep fighting. The com·
ment.ary said the U.S. pea~
talk offer was ~ly a
"trick.")
( In J a k a r t a , ttle
lndonesi.a.n foreJ.gn office
said it had not received any
official replies from Hanoi
or Washingtoo oo its offer to
host preliminary talks on
the Vifrtnun war. But the
official I~an n e .,,. s
agency quoted a U.S. Slate
Department spokesman as
saying .lak:lrta is acceptable
to ithe United Stz.tes if Hanoi
agrees.)
rn h.is appeal for an end to
racism. the Pope did not
mention alai.a U.S. CivU
Rights LeadeT Dr. Martin
Lut·her King Jr.
Cosmos 212
Launched
By Soviets
MOSCO W IU Pll -
Cosmos 212 -The Sc>vief
Union's 12th apace probe of
the year -Mlirled around
the earttl today In what ap-
parently was a trial ,,. for
a mamed flight.
It was laullched Sonday,
ttle first Cosmos ol 1968 lo
fly in it>e "mMtDed ru~
lanes."
lte panmeten w e t e = fdenlicaJ to tnose of -1, me last&M.t man·
ned tpaCe fli(M lut April
wtlidl eaded in a n!-Mtr'y
cr&ib e.t killed Ooemonwt
Vladimir Kom.M'OY. c.o.nos
SU J)ellfJCl artUDd 4he eatll
every 88.7' miDut.tl at
eMitlJdel ranjas fnm l2'7
to Ht mile$.
(Welt Gennln 1 pa ~ e
~Maries reported
rec.-eivllll sipall from tbe
Ca.mos wllidl indJcMed it
..,., m.....S. A ~uman
krr file Berlin eb8ervatory
llid l\gDals were beln1
received OG tile freqoeoey nonnaUJ ns8"Yed for com·
mankaMon ~ mllmed
aMtlitu 80d .... ll"G'IDd
~ ln B•cbum ,
Germany, ftle B o c b u m
t~ a1IO reportld
receivine tile ...-but dM! not ~ oa IJI tn-of
experbnent OGrlCUntd )
Tua, l>e SovM!t MWI
•tenc'Y· 19ve no ..,.al(ic in· tormatiOD on h 8putD6t • 8
mi.Don. It -'d the llltellke
5 times mare
Cash 11.rizes than any
Chevron Standard
game ever!
You're· already
three stamps ahead
Quick! Reach for the nearest pair of scissors and
cut out the above authentic Hula Dollars stamps.
Then rush over to your nearby Chevron dealer
or Standard Station and pick up your official
Game Card. Paste the stamps on matching
positions. You may already be on your way to
being a big winner! And with the stamps you get
each time you stop in, you could e11lly find yourself
$2500 to the goodl Because Hula Dollars has fivt
....... more c.nh ~than MJ Chwron Standard ,........,, Play as often u you like. No purch1M II neeeuary, and
anyone can winl You can wtn fromone ••• upto~
hundred dollaral You etn also win co1orful orchids for your
car -ptut a chance at t XP•nM-P•ld vacetJon1 to Hawan-
f or two I So come to Chevron Island and play Hul1 Dollars •••
the wild new money game at all Standard Stations and par-
ticipating Chevron Dealers I See Off le I al Ru lea for detalla.
CHEVRON DEALERS
STANDARD STATIONS
WM "f\aiAl•*•~·"l-------~-------------... ,-
1
-------------.. ~-------------..:.-----,.:%..-i--1 , ) ~
------------..-.---------......,-....--...... ~-------oioi
. •
•
Diiiy 10 -10 S.1. 10 . 7 Prices fffediye Mo1. • TllS.-WM., Cosll Mesa Siert Olly
.:::-~ .....
LMt ~1 .. , •• ,
1W.
PICNIC
JUG
$1~57
0. .... $1 .t7
'l.ASTICS DI "·
Mehlt
SHOE RACK
..... ....... Liit
rtmt1c•
WASTE
CANS 87¢
0. .... $1 .J7
PLAITICI DI"·
.....
BEDSPREAD
$5.88
0.. .... fl.11
DOMUTICS Din.
.. ~ ..
RIDI ON
HOISi
$1.66
0. .... $2.J7
TOY DIPT.
~ --.... . . ,...i...-.: _w' ....
IACK REST
WMle ......... ......
0. .... $1 .'7
PUltNfTUH Din.
w .........
FLATS
Ow .... $UI
aHOI DIP'T.
. .... 1MM7
..... ,.,., .. ,,
CAULir.NG &
CAULKING GUN 87¢
$1.10 y ..
NOMI IMNOVIMI NT DIPT.
s-. s...
..... ... , .. ,,
LUii and
OIL CHANGE
$1.99
LOUNGE
CHAIR . $8.57
0. .... $10.11
PUltNITUll DIP'T
......
o..tl .... Liit
Venatlle
SPACE
SAYER $9.77
0. .... $15.9'
HAJIDWAH DIP'T • .... .......
Lett ......
LAUNDRY
I AS KET 43¢
0. .... 71c
PLAITICI DIP'T. . ... ........
Ulll
Q.Ht-'
IEDSPRIAD
$5.97
0. a... $1.'6
DOMUTICS DaP'T.
.. ~.:.:..-·:-;; j
Sit ..
MERRY
RIDER $2.88
·o. .... $4.44
TOY DIP'T.
llectrk
ICE CREAM
FREEZER
$10.88
Al'tt.
IJ.1•17
""-'"''""
. .... ,.,., .. "
0. ·~ $12.11 SMALL APPLIANCU DIPT.
...... ...
SHIFTS
$2.00
4 ....,.,
BADMINTON
SET $2.47
0. .... $1.47
..... ,., .. .,
I POllTI ... 9qODS DIP'T.
CIMny ., S...W-4
SPICE RACK
$1.68
50' ~ 7/16 ..
GARDEN HOSE
$1.07
0. 199-$1.U
'ATIO DIP'T. .... ......... ""· Liit IJ.1•11 ,.. """' DOOR
MIRRORS $2.88
0. .... $4.17
MIHOll .... PICTUH DIP'T. . ... ........ ....
Liit ,.,., .. "
21"d6"
THROW RUG
$1.88
Ow .... $2.77
DOMllTICI DIP'T •
WMte ONdtlll .....
I.NI ,., .. 11
50 eo.t
MAGIC CUPS
38¢
0. .... 57c
PARTY GOODS DI P'T •
.....
IEACH
IALL 64¢
0. .... 17c
TOY DIP'T •
.,... ......... .... "'-' i•1 .. 1r
Jr. '°" WESTERN
JEANS 99¢
0. .... $1.57
IOYI WIAR Dll'T'.
10% OFF
AU WATCH •AIU
FOi MDT THlD DAYS
WITH THIS COUPON
"Ni JIWILRY DI".
I MM
ANSCO FILM
$1.77
Ow .... Sl.U
CAMHA DI" • . .... ,., .. "
W ASHINGTOH (UPI) -
FOW' montba before h
D e m o c r a t l c Nadoa.al
ConventloCI, Pal't1 leadtra
and power btOt•n a.re
cautiously cbooliDa up ridea
kl what ii shapins up II I
tbrM·••Y race fOr tbe
presidential nom.lneeloa.
Two of ~ c~•.
Sena. Eugene J. McCarthy
and Robert r . Kennecty, are
anooooced and r u n n I a I
bard: uoanoounced but ~
tive is Vice P r e • l d e n t
Rubert H. Humphrey, wb9
i.s expected to d e c I 1 r e
publicly after be returm
from a Florid.a vacatioll
next week.
So far the list oi u-
donementa loots like this:
Humphrey can boast of
eodorsemeot by the blgbest-
ranking Democrat who has
gooe on record, farmer
President Harry S. Truman.
From the 24 Democratic
governors, Kennedy gets the
edge with the backing ol
two: Kenneth M. CurtU of
Maine and Philip H. HoU of
Vermont. Humphrey has the
~o en~nt bf one,
William L. Guy ol North
Dakota, plus the tacit back·
i'tg of ll>Other John J .
McKeid>eo of Louisiana.
A•HJ-111 H. LOA~ IJl-llH
N4AHllM COOH ... ..,, ... '°" llACM
....... AT ICH., "7·1 t41
""""•TON lfACH CINTH
f DAR. Y "LOT
.,
McCa1hJ bee yet to bna~ WUDam I'. R,.a, JlSetwlre L. ed ldelr1• )OUUcal atm.
kKo tbe pbetutarial rub. <*1nftr, Jacob R. GUbert, K e n D • d 1 bu th.rte
AmollC ..,.....,, lt'a JUlt Joba G. Dow. aad Jonathan DemocraUc ft.ate cbairman:
about a deed beat ~ B. Blffham, ot New York; John J. Burns, of New York,
Bwnpbr17 _... KeanlllJ, Jdlll ' Ooaywr ~r. o f Letter S. Byman, of
wUb tbe latter llttial tbe Alldal1•; • ,......_. J. Massachusetts, Md J
eqe only beclGM o1 1be St.Germain. of R ~ O 4 e Joeepb Garrahy, ol Rb~
tupport be ,_ from bit w.d; Fr& 'lbom~ laland. He alto ha.. tht ~· M~=..:.. JC.en. ~ ofNo;~tlu.,. J . po 1itlca11 y powerr14
...__ ~~~ wa»-P' Gnu, ol PftnnlvaDia; Cal lf or n I a AilsemblJ
.a'"' _..WI&., ncr • P1ts1 T. Ml n L ol Hawall Speaker Jesse Unruh; an at. Yoodale ol MiDGelota and Fred R. H a r r 1 1 ~ and Bl'Oet AUma o f trktive family n a m 1 IDIJOUDCed Wuti.mcton. usually found In t b 1 Oklabom.a. have _..__ The Ow concresamerrwbo Republican ruits, stat 1
for Humpbn7; two vwmu. have IDDOUDCtd f or Rum. Rep. John D. Rockefeller IV
Joseph D. Tydings o f =~ Bou9I wn.1-. H a le o( ~ Artt•mLA; and '• MAryland and Stephen M. "-r ~ • • -&A. YOClll& of Ohio have ,..,.... , rJ 1Au'-'ma; Henry Gov. RObel't Bock ol [n.
their blessinfl to Keanedy. B, Gouala of Teu1; a.et. <ilana. wbere a crucial
YOWIC fa~ a Kennedy-Holifltkl o I ~; primary the9t ii comtn May
McCarttly ticket. .In 1>a1 Jamea G. O'H•a. of 7.
order llicbifan, Md Cltmeat J. McCarthy bas been tn-
McCaft:hy pt. 1ato lbe efl· 1 Zlbk»ctl, of WjfcOMin. dorsed by tbe executive dorsement race at tie The coogre9Smen backing board of Americans ff!'
Uou,,e level, but Ken.ne<ty McCt.ritly an Henry S. Democratic Action (ADA).
"bas .tit>e edge d>ere on Reuss and Robert W . · He also hu going for him
numbers, willb 17 reprtteD· Kutenmeier ol Wisconsi.o. impressive showings in I.be
tatives having announced and George E. Brown Jr. New Ha mp• h ire and
support for him, agaiast s to and Don Edward • of Wi.scoosin primarift.
date for Hulnptlrey and 4 for Catifornia. Each oandktMe also has
McCaretly. · Each candidate · has some minus poir.IU.
The Kennedy 17 a r e aomethlng special going for Humphrey'• camp started
mostly from CalifonU mid blm in the way of en· late but its initial liet of en·
New York. They •e Robert donements. ~ laclrl any of Ult
L. Leggett, John V. Tunney. Humphrey has George nwooally imo.n dons on
Thomas M. &es, a D d Me1my, president ol Ule Vietnam. Ha position on
Phillip Burton of Ca.1.IJomia; AFUIO. who p-eewnably Vietnam bas e&Cranged him
Be:njamin S. Roseo1ha1, wt~ bring wiUJ him orpniz· from the liberal community.
•
SAVE SOD
U lllllAN ..._ MOW
tl024 S. LUITWllLU, LA I.Jin tt>t CHAPMAN, IJMOIO
LA MIA.ADA CINTH ORAHM COUNTY PLAZA
CGlfA MllA IAMTA MA
HISTOl I SUNROWll_A.40.UJJ DOWNT~
SOUTH COAST PWA JOI W. 4TH ST.. ICI J.lt41
A Ti k a• TR.1-ce.
.... All IUO ON THI MALL TA .. 7'40 lutH~ 'AU ctNTll
COIT~ 111111A
UOO HAIHOl ILVO,. ICI t .1 ttl
H.AUOl CINTll
I
. ..
f
• • • ,
r. • • • 'i
L
"' ~
' ..
e
r
'· 11
e
d
d
I•
e
n
n
n
'·
•
·Fon The
Record
DEATB NOTICES
BALTZ MORnJARIES
C.nu clel Mar OR I-MM
Cott. Mesa Ml M4U
BEU. BROADWAY
MORTIJARY '
llt Broadway, Colt& Blea
LI I-USS
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PA.Jllt
Cemetery e M.uarJ
CUpel _
SMt Padfte Vld »me Ne,,,.n Bead1, callfenla
MUM
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
78'1 Botta Ave.
Wetbnlmlte:r _..
SMmrS MOR'nlilY
a7Mlilale. Bu~-aua
WESreUl"F llOAn1ilT
U'1 z.1n:: .. Ctlfll --'
WU'l'MJNITE1l
MEMORIAL PAU
M~m•>
1*1 Be9dl. Wntmlltter
Ut-1711 e -.tm
r I
Kuchel Bill
Given Push
AN.umrM -U. 6.
Seoator Tboaw H. Kuchel
(R-An•bttm), today aald be
would c~DtOr and aup-
port an npi.ndecl bill to en-
oourace WOTk·study
ooopea Mive educatlon pro-
grams.
Under cooperative educa·
tion plans, college students
alternate periods of full·
time acedemic work with
periodl fl. f\111.time employ-
ment in a field related to
their studies.
Such a program, he aald.
would provide a means for
industry to aid in the higber
education of the nation's
disadvantaeed and minority
group young people.
Toro Mess Hall
Con tract Given
TUSTIN -Oong:ressman
James B. Utt (R-Tustin) ~
day announced a $794,398
contract award for the con-
struction of a new mess ti.11
at the Marine Corps Air
Facility, Santa Ana.
Monday, Aorll 15, 1 '61 DAJL Y PILOT 7
Two Cremated
3 Girls . Killed
In Car Crashes
GARDEN GROVE -n'b
Garden Grove bllb ICbool
girls were cremaCJed 1n a
fiery crash and a two-year-
old Anaheim pl was killed
ln 1eparate traffic ecddeots
over the ~end.
Burned to death ln a two ------------------.-1968 Coa.nty Trafftc
45 DeaUI Toll
1"7
51
car accident at W~ Street
aod Cbapm.an A v e n u e ,
Garden Grove, Saturday
night were Deidre Girouard,
18. and Grace Stock, 17.
bums. T h e y a.. L/Cpt.
George Brewer. 20, and
IJCpL Don McWiWams, 19 • WMnesaes said ttiey were
thrown f:om the compact
type statioo wagon and ex·
tingui9bed tbeir flaming•
cl~ by rolling on nearby
lawns.
Driver of the other car,
Albert R. K.imey. 48, of
GU'den Grove s u f f e r e d
minor injuries. He was
booted on suspicion of
felony manslaught« and
driving Wider the influence
of alcohol
'COLONEL MAGGY' GETS FRIEDOMS FOUNDATION AWARD IN COUNTY
Martha Raye Flanked by Mr. end Mr1. WalNr Knott In 8u.ne Perk
The bill would provide
seed money to gel colleges
started on such projects.
B&G • Coost:ructors, Inc.,
1101 West Chestnut Ave.,
Santa Ana, won the e<>n·
tract.
Police said the car in
which they ~re riding with
two Marines was struck by
a vehicle which tried to pass
on the right.
The Camp Pendleton men
are both suffering from
Anaheim police said the
little girl, Mary Sahagun,
died from injurie$ S\lffered
wten she dashed fnnn
between parked vehicles at
5'/:t N. Sabina St. and wu
hit by a car.
Martha Raye
Gets Award
Of Freedom
ANAHEIM -F.m1ec ln
the fint annual SoGfhern
California Gin R u m m y Tot.nament, edledllled .for
Saturday and Sunday at ttie
Obf.rter Hoose here, will be
oloeed at 5 p.m., ThurtdaY.
accordiog to Maury s i l v e rm.an, tournament
dlairman.
Entry fee for the touma·
meot is '25, with • major
portion of that emount going
to the Boy'• Ohlb of Garden
Gl'Oft, 1'bidl is sponsoring
llee~
Applications ere avail~
at the club, -Larson, Garden G~.
Fire CaD•
=''• •:\.'J.;!I· s. r ;-011r ~.. ur11
e:;-·,;:;;. c~ fire. 1cn s11nlt
1:fl· "'"· Sundty._ l'Mdlul t ld. 132'2 W"11ft1Mt!W IM. •
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
ALWAYS FIRST GUALITY
Special buy
for summer in
cool cotton
two1ome1!
5porty jalllako ..,. f« .... ..,t.o to ....., .....
fvn ltl Jclftloko shOl1I show ()ff tott notch ..rlof.. .... ., °"'°" M\ eolldl. c ...... kfllt ..,.
Me coler -4'1notecf ttripl• Ill ~ llyt.. fo~
..,,,.. ~~·!Ml a.w MdldoMkl.
~~ ... , ..
COSTA MESA
(Harbor Shoppin9 <:enter)
'
AFTER-EASTER
1
Save on ieans
, • · 1 for men and boys!
Special . purchase. Never Iron Penn-Pr.U-jeans of polyeittr/
T ddl t• e cotton cord or hop-socking. Slim, hip hugeina 0 e I me western styling, leg creases. Hurry I QllOntftles
boxer short set :;,~:::!'"-
Don't """ thla buyf 2 pc. Toddlafme• coorcfl-
MGtch playwear Mt Ind""-boxer ahom, wing·
flp ahirt. Both of eoft, dvrable Dur9n•' cotton. ~colon, ~•n llzea. S.. them today!
Reg.4.98
NOW ••.•••••
..,.. ~rolilft .1 ...
Reg. 3.98
3.66
2.88
Special on our
skiffer iackets
for women!
100% nylon jackets keep out the wind, roln and
the colcl I Perltct for booting, alcnng, battling,
hiking, golfing ••• or jvlt any oc.caslonl Look
· ortot In oqva, pink, lime or lllOln I S.M-L
Buy nowl 3.88
lig clearance on girls' dreuea r Women'• dre .... reduced to dearl
;;;: •A, NOW ........... -2e 99
tn.W..1·14 3 99 Orig. •s, NOW.............. •
;;ri;,':-;'67NOW ···-···· ·-· 3.88
L*"-4~I 5.88 Orig.•I, NOW ............. .
,..,,,,, ~ ......... le W-f..-1 Hef tW•ry ttyft lfl ofl
.............. -...ty ._it.."" .... ct1 ... 1 Mefty~~· 7 88 Orig. '10, NOW............ e
Prices cut on handbags I
o;i;2.99,NOW 1.88
Ori-;:'4.H,NOW 3.88
Women'• 1hffr hCNe 1
.... ~ .. ··-· 2 pair 99«
Women'• blouMS reclucedl
Orig. 2.91, NOW 2.44
Lo~ price on iewelryl
I ................. 2/'I Orig. •1, NOW• • • ...,...,.,.,.... 2/'3 Orig. •2, NOW •••
Women'• tpOrttw••r
Orig.4.91, NOW 3.66
HUNTINGTON
Girls' ankle pant 1etll
i i ... >~· 3 22 Orig. 3.98, NOW •
ori~·.4.98,NOW 3.88
loy•' sport shirt savings I
Orig.2.98,NOW le88
Save nowt Girh' pant topt
11.o,..,.
Orig.1.91, NOW
SI-7·1•
Orig. 2.91, NOW
Glrl1' white blouMl I
Mt.M• 2 44 Orig.2.91,NOW •
BEACH
( Huntin9ton Center)
• _______ .,_... __________ ._. _________ _
..
IC'HARli ACCOUNT
TDDAVI
Savel men'• 1port 1hirtll
Orig.2.91,NOW 2/'5
Reduced I Collection
of fabric remnant•
now value -priced
to fit your budgetl
NEWPORT BEACH
( Fashion Island)
'
...
I DAIL V PILOT Mondly, ~Pl'll 15. lqf,8
Marriages~ Divorees :tllong Coast
..
t ..
•
•
INTE•LOCUTOltY DfC•E £<
A m'\.a l Stv,.,.'X . ._ °" ... Stu,...,,,..
f,,_•rel • Si~"" 8..-"bl,.,, •ftf" \..,....
Jtt•f'I 0 tCeitlft,.... """' l~•"'tt w ",...... ......
ltw\ W• flK-"' .... .,_n w~1"'4.
C)rwJ\ M•"" &ttpbul"V .. f,,,,..._... &•
'""""' ••cf\•n:I S"'1"""._,"' ,,,,,,..., lN 1'1'11".,-. ~rv L"" ~.,.,_, Yt AA•hlt" O•\.
"l'b""' 81r'bar" )~f"' L ,.t•u•\•f' V"'-,. ... ~ ._., l -A
84~'9rl )f'-•'" ,,.,.,,.,. y,, ~ """ T••-f!IN ~""" "' hlltw •ulb Da""""I• ~ .. ,If ""' .,,_,,.,.rl J ... I
l vr"'• G To-"' Cler• .!. Te_.
"""'"' • "' llt·-1 wa We'"" • ltt lndtl
S...c!to 0 J•Cli:-"' ~ l J.c•-
v 1,..fAI. "' O.• .,. o.tlonl Elll• D••
"'""'. l ,.. ~ ... ,,. Doo\elO ""'' • Sii~'"' ",.,.~ .... , Jn·t""'f't# "' I(~ J~ (••"''t.,. Dorl f"~\tWI "1 •.0.1f'd <" o,..._. n-.,.,..M..._,..
"'\I' M (Ot;fU v.. ·~rl ,,,, C"CJh• Jnvr• A Stl'•d._., "'' Ary 9-.,,..,,
S"'tdlt!V
l\'ew Official
At Univer sity
SANTA Cl.ARA Thi'
l'niversitv of Santa Clara
has a ne~ prcs1rlent. He i~
the Very Rev. Thomas D.
Terry. who has ~id he com-
pletely supports the stronR
~takment on a c a d e m i c
freedom made by h i s
predecessor. Father Patrick
A. DoDOboe.
The school r e c e n t 1 y
changed ita policy of re-
stricting speakers to one of
allowing speakers of all
viewpoint$ to talk on cam·
pus. confusing many alumni
who still assume the school
agree~ With the positH>n or
the Apeaker.
1'le~an Awarded
~~c hool
Mary Casey.
d~ughter of Mrs. Mary Lee
Casey of 1968 Anaheim Ave ,
Costa Mesa ha" been award-
ed semester honors for
S"bolatic achievement at
Wtteaton Collei.?e n e a r
Ctlicago.
S•mester honors are earn·
f'rl bv student!I who carry 12
or more h<>urs and avera~e
2 2 ~~iide point average of a
poi;,.ible 3.0.
(;e r Pro mot ionM
Three Cat StatP ruUerton
facutly member1i have ht-en
n1tmed department
chairman by P r e s 1 d e n t
William 8 . Lan,Jesdorf
They are Hans H. l...edf>r.
anthropology : Dr. Gertrude
M. Reith. geography: and
Dr. Lee E. Grandi. speedt.
ftt11.11!.'I•
...... ( Hf>.,_ "' lt~"-'O T-• ,,,,,_
\I/WI! llM•i. s..ttr "' OoNtld LH $9111 Clo•...,. •-• ~ ••-o -.. ·-... ltt~• P Wtod •• Wo•rw E \If-~ '""'',.,,,, .. ...... -· .... l twm41M
PMrlcl• w .,..,,..""'•" "" K ......... i ,,_,,. .. "
AP,.tl C•roNrw f.-ft ~• W•••.,..i ~.-,.-.
T•tt Jr ~rtodt A ~....,, iyc -..."-' '' w ~" lrwt" O.• c..,,.., )• ..... Yi.,,...
PaWl<-J• (•"'•" •vrt1 Junt w .. 1<0'1 "' ltoeN'~ o. ..
Wuta>tt
•Mrl \J Wi#,.,Jth\<'Ji,"'f "" t("'"IY"' , Wurtao-. f t\•I P JAt•,,.dif'I '-'' flt,Jtt#.,. ••'4"°'ittr-ll'~tv c_..,, Sl'M•~••• ~ °"'-,. •.
(t\Ar '-" ~W\4,..
l lfl .,. A 6M•1 .,. t(•_,_,._,.. e 1'_.•
..... r~ ,..,...., \."''"'' ~ o ..... ~ ~ ,f'I,..,
1 .. ""'" " ( ... ti ~ •• ,~-... ~ ""--r ..
(•"l (•fVi"' l "" 'el'f't~~· """' , ... ,.. ~
,,,~.,....,.
~-p·,,,..,....,.. "' ,, • .....,, " is;. •• _.
, ... l'lfl,. ' ··-·~ "" .... '°M,. \ ,,.,..,..
""' (', l <"a--. ~ ,,.... J v (""tui"'t 1,.....,_... P••""'<" ~.,. ¥' ¥.. M•
~~· ,.., Otiiul"'~ ~ ~ ... ,., --...,.._
...... .., ... , ,,,.,... ~-·-""' "~ t\•' .. ~
l Hi•~ Ch•l,..r "'' • .,.. """lOI"' ~ ~--..--MA,...,.~ •"fl Ctf'tc-,..._. Y'I w• H·•-
0.,...... .'"" .. " le~ JN~ 8•,...,.. "°' ,.....,._......, ;.~ •
11-••t""t.Ct• & ""'•"'""'' w.. r.~ .. ,. • ... ""'". t ""1t &"f' ,. ..... ,., """ .. '"""-" .. ··-·~AV "'""' v.. i..._., ..,_ f n,....,..r
/kfAvl'fW l_N ()""" ,_. ~-vv-"'l• "9tW ()-,..,,.,.. ... ("<r• • ' •v'1'~ "'" •-•11"" •• v..-n,..... ,. .... .,.. • .... ,...,.. """ C\,..... .. \ • ,,f" ....... .-,.~
""vr =--tv·•• f'-. t~"' t'~•-
""' ,f,,,..,,.. "'I \t•""~ -:*'lt'llt &•.,_,.,,,....,
\tA.,._"d (\'°\~ c... ...,,., .... "" ~"W'\a.... .. V'hflt• ·"•"•r• ta~' "" ..,. ... ..,. 1 '"••1't' ·""'° ni•-, ... •'""'"•• ~ c-.,..,. ... 1
"•'" •"'!IO•;.
Genetic· ..
Doctorate
Planned
BERKELEY -New joint
rloctoral r r 0 ~ r a m s in
,Ef'netics and special educa·
ltnn have been approved by
thp .Joint Graduate Board or
lhP Univrr!iilV nf California
and the C~lifnrnia Stall'
Colleges.
BrginninR nrxt !all lhf'
T'h D. program m special
rducation will be offered by
Los An"eles State College in
roopcrrtion with UCLA. Thr
gene11cs doctoralP will be
offered jointly by San Dieio
State College and lJ C ·
Berkeley
These arP the third and
rourth programs to be ap-
proved by the Board. The
l960 California Master Plan
fnr Higher Education limits
Ph D. work lo the University
except for 1oint prol[rams.
UC-San Diego and San
OieJ(o State ColleRe alrea<t.v
offer a joint doctora!A! in
chemistry. and UC-Berkeley
and San Francisco State
College cooperate in a Ph.D.
program in ~rec1al educa ·
ti on.
Newport Man
A warded Degree
David H. Krueger. 441
Tustin A~.. Newport
Beach. assistant professor
or speech at California State
College, Long Beach. ha s
earned thP doctor o f
philosophy degree in speech
at use
Dr. Krueier wrote h1i1
doctoral diMertabon on "An
F.xperimental Study or t~
Accura<:y of Experienced
and tnexperienced Spukerll
In ldentifyinit A u d i e n c e
Behaviors as Indicative ri(
Feelings o f Agreement.
In de cision or
Dis.agreement."
EXPERT WATCH REPAIR
6 DAYS ONLY
AT THIS
SPICIAL PllCI
.___.,.........,..., . _.. .... _._..T_ ...... ....... ............. . ,.,.,.., .., . .... ........
... , 'tt .. .....
·-~--...
5.95
S.-ICIAL IUYI
NIWUT
WATCHIANDS
1.88
OfAIGI,, AT'.YOUI HNNrrs
"NI JIWl&.IY DOAATMINT ............. ,...M--.
°""'9114 • = ,,...., ....
~LH""9 MU,.TllfeTOtt IU(lf "IW~T IUICM
~ C...... •H""'I""" ~ rM111011 bl.,od ,..,_.., °'-""""" lf1-at .... Dltet !OWi' ~•I l'.c C.I Hwy
"ltAI. 09,UIU
r.--~ ~ .. ...., • cr.-
M<1Ct...i.
u-°""'"' -· .. ·--· _.,..l"f\e.,. O•• ,_,......, ~ _..,.......,.
~ h >Alll Cv-.-.-·
,~,........._ .. ..... "°"' tt..... , .. ,...._. ... f...,.,
f r t('t'""' ~,.. ...... (>,-..... -~
W.."'Ctil M C .. " ""'"' , .,._ 'C -. f'llio c.,.. ·~ &" ................ -· ....... .. _.
~."'< .. S,.fflit ... ~ -.... ...,,. , ..... ..... r,...,...,
"11~ , .. ·-WI_.. •• ·~· 'WN'ttllf• .. h ........
t;.··~ ,_.,. , ....... 411 •l+h
£ .. ,,....
Ao\flf"'tl" g. ...................... .....
~""~ ......... ". --'""" ..... r-., .. ,. , .......... , .. , ................ ._
................... ~ .. 'ti. f ~·
ei-.... ~ t •• t ............. -·
'6 -···
..... _ ..... _.o.....,..
-"' 0. l.t CIW "' .__ 0. LAI C't..e ~ -,...... ...., "' "•lrldt ..... . ... ~~-...... ... SIWte'r J Olrl'\tlM ._ I. v .... ._ .. CNtllt I .......... .............. ..-. -...............
-· I...• c-""\..,... v .. _ c,.,,, ........ -...... , ·-· ·--· ._.,. ow... '" ''".._ M¥111t ,,,_ ..
• ""-o...i ... --Hitt Oltfllel
---9"1• ._.. V1 s-••• .. _.
.,,IOI,.. J. (NW>t •• "......, • ltftlolll II,_.. e>... .,._...,. •• $ .... ..,, 11-lc• .-.... -"-............... . ~· 0.lrO¥ -. '-• It GI'"'°'
-' _.....,. "' '-· 0...ld ---If-..,._ ~ •• l!n•f'll .,.._, ~»
.....,Ill -· .... l ""'" "'-''''"" ,...,.., '" ~" " Wlllerd C """°'-
V"91..i. C ,_ ,,_ It.vi l'-
Ar-M NI ........ •tcNAI I' -""
,_ ... M-4"'~1. ~ -14MM_. ........ ~
WI""° Ardlle .. ...... 0-..
•rd11f, Jr
/Mry AM A. V............. Yl lollbY J
Ye'11r-Le,,. 4. T-le "' L-• f T-olt C:.,,_.M M Galllle1' Yl llllY C G.t~
~ ... Slllrlhl OI-c-.,. _,. •-
..,..1n Crowt
Or .. L ICI"' "' C ..... J ICltll E .. IY,. 0.N l'lflt Yl Mffft H~f'Y
Plett T-l T l .... ,..,,... vs NIY'11e E , .. ~ M41t•"" lew W-"' II"" Otto Wide Jr Lt•~• Sl'lellell Lot-vt Jdlll •tcNrd
~ Aflllt l(ey Ol<nbl\I Y\ Y--' OtmltN
.... J Wlltll'N" YI ·-G Wiii'""'" "'"""' C Crvr "' Glo<i. M Crur M ..... ,,. M ·--... Ferr1t w f::,......,VW'I ~·••• JN• Pr••""' YI ltoben OrtU
.. ,.....
JllllY AMI 0.... l!t .'-CtMl-.11 a.. ~,_.,..~C--1*"'1
Ill
Ylclll """' l'.,C "" Wll!Wft ~ ,,.,d M.,• AM C.rroll "' ~ I . (¥<Gii 0.•le.., ll!lchwtn "" ,.....,, £•rl ..ldWI,,
JUtl ,..,.. a.-1!t T,....,.. W•I ...
~ Cy .... L ~,..E....,A. .....,_,
IC•lflf'Yfl H Mc:OoMld ft A..,_
V•n lluren MCOoMld
llt\IU •. l lum YI $;1Mn lalJe lluftl
Norell• J, Flsll YI Herold WtYM fllllt 01Yld F, Sflolntl Yl M41ry Ml~ 5mlltl
Judlltl .loYU l_., .. TMd C-1...cl l_,.,
Wll"-J.cll IOe-Y9 l'l!vltll HedlM I(~ ~ M. MllY "' .... Id J. Mell'
Ml ....... Gtftft "' )-·-· c;,_ ,,._ I.OU Wlbott ¥1 at.CV I.. WI!'°"
LoulM G. Dou "' °'""" •. ~ Judttll AM Cea YI Eddie (OJ<
G•.a Lucille l(ltmlolll .., L•tOY
JUDOMlllT$
Jollft H. V ... ff1 "' Jell M. VOlkt"
G=nd AN! l!lleN "' .fJbsr1 l ew-
.V..,,... J ....... "" .Jondle• c ~llt
lll<kl lllr ... Ogle "' lltTY ~ 0.le laOft A. u Frence "" ._, .. Lt
Frana •klWlrd F. c;,,., .., Wlftde J. Grev
El:ni.lil Loe<:ll YI MldlMI 1'~11110 Leed!
Selldn Jet!! Wrltftl "' tJcto.AI h •'I ....,,,
DeM• Gllleft E-on ,,..,_ kfll &IMI ... •odoJIO ll'eru. Jt. .. CollM<l 0 Solt Ptru
CaJ'OI AM CHltl "' David l!"'UI
C-1
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
Shop at
ho,me!
CAIL COLLECT (21a) 6" 0111
•W.Mlll• Zplal ................... • ,... :t_ •.t.
..... , .. dint
,
•
... Decorate for spring ~Will1
custom-made draperies··
,,,
* • raacltort.*8ic
c1Di1 latanr
• inclucl" in11ana1lon on your rocl1; mlni""'m ·l•null• 7r
Hove draperies mode to fit yovr windows ••• and scrw, tool CUltofn draperies look better, hang better. We've a fcDfc fe
comp~ement every furniture Mtttng ... and it's priclcl for 1GVingt "°wl Choose from our decorator .. ~ of light, airy
sheers, elegant antique tcrtins, dromatlc sJ.b weaws, or warm natural tutuNS. PMney'1 custom·rnade de.,_ CIN -.
ured ~ atyourl home, ~ toilcnd and carefully iMtalled. Mt phone and ow coMUitaat Will bring)"* 1 q i k If ..
cant Qt' the details for,.. lllt doa't cl.lay, .. terrific low price ii offeted for this week onfyl
Service availaltl• in greater Los Angel•, Orange ancl Ventura Counti•
...
I
If ...
"'·
....
"' • Lt
thp
··~ -
,
J
I
Mon~. April 15, 1968 DAIL V PILOT 9
RFK Leading McCarthy
LOO ANG~· VJ» -nte ftnt Stat< p. ~,.
sioce PruideDt J • 1Ui IO D
1&14 u •O&.lkbl't nm for rt·
aurvey tatet! 8-7.
K~ prefen.l
hr tbe tioil by ~
•sgt. Sun hine
Officer Leads SF 'Puff-in'
State Legislators Returning
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ills mea1>urt. But Reagan that still would be on th
Le&Wator• relW'aeCl to tht oppose11 r t p e a I . And books in CaUlornia lf the
capitol today with the elec-Congress ltas approved a Rumford act were moditied a 1how1 s.t\. Robert
n.nedy teading Sen .
M<:Cartt\.Y among
Otlifornia Democrats with
21 percent undecided.·
percent ol tbe ~
aabd. McCm1b1 polled X
perceat, Pl91ldebt Johnson
14 pereent. Vice President
Rubert llurnplny six pur
cent, other eandliatea tbree perctnt ad 21 percent didA't bave a preference.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
-A vawa poUcemaa who
joined HO~ Jn a mari-
juoe putt.Jo SUDdl.Y WU
nicmamed • ' S e r c e • n t
Sunshme'' by bil dellghted
amoting eompWclns and
suspended from 4be farce by
the police dlief.
T'be poJI. published Sun-
day, gave the results of ' a..
' I
I See by Today's
Wint Ads
• Rere'a a 23 loot boat traJI.
tt with~ 1981 Hml\le. be. ma IOld by • printe
pa.rtr.
• If )'Oll're lookl.nQ lor a
&Wit camen. proJectdt,
li&bts and splicer ~·· one for SlOO.
• Where there ~ a u a e d
Kile in aooc:t condition.
• 'I'b1s ia & ~
wood hutch, like new -lls a laJ"ie one, being
90Jd by a private puty.
e For only $95. you Cllll buy
a beiae naugahyde sofa,
7 feet long with foam
eushions and ca.sten, the
party who is ottering
this bargain says it's in excellent condition.
Sailor Hurt
In Explosion
SAN DlEGO (AP) -A
Gi!rman seaman w a s
airlifted to San Diego Naval
Ho.,ttal after he was in·
jured in an engine room e.x-
ploeion Sunday on the West
~ freighter Paten-
lJarc.
HOSf>ital attendants said
Siegfried Sibenhom, Tl, suf-
fered a fractured slcull and
broken jaw and knee. .
The Coast Guard &aid the
vessel ""'5 l3S m i 1 e s
80Uthwest of San Diego
when a piiton disintegrated
in ~ enp cawing fuel to
lpite ancl e~.
NIGHT -"' DAY SERVICE
9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATUltDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
This . Gas Company
empl~
isa friCnd
of the
,
~ .. Yo•· H•'• IUcbl> uoined. H•'• aood ot h;1 job.
Police Sgt. Rictlard R.
Bereess. 36, a boyilb-took-
mg fadler « two. toot
several puffs oo a dark·
brown cigarette d4he pull·
in on tile step.s of the Hall ot
Justice.
~ess was ansted and bodUft cm dmges o f
possessioo ot marijuana aod
promptly suspended o n
orders from Police Cltie!
'lbomas Cahill.
At the hippie-ptOclaimed
puff-in, Bergess wore h1S
polioe uniform wiilhout a
revolver but with bright red
socb. A nd ribbon was
wound aroUlld bis band and
an iris wu stuc1t in • but-
toobole near his badge.
"I em trying to prove r
haft ttJe right to do what I wa wttti my own body.··
Ber1ess ext>~· "I fttt
tti.e present lw:r-_,aiMt
marijuana and LSD bavt
reached the same ~Uy
as those against elc<lb0l 4lw'·
ing probibidion."
Hippies clipped • II d
cheml4. 'Ibej • t r • w e. d
flowers in bis1 patta • •aid be WU s.r1eant Sun-
abine.'J
After beiDC boote~. &rsesa rejcjoed Che JIOff-m
wearing a pri90ft blanket
and a white shirt Oftl' bright
red underwear. Appointed ... «eaot 1 0
months ago, Bergesis said be
bas been SIJ'l()ldng JDM"i·
juana since Aogust 1985
wtien he sampled IOID• of
the evidence obtained in a
police raid in ttie Haight·
Ashbury di'strict.
While a patrolman in title hippi~ distrtct. he said he in-
terviewed several o( the
nower dlHdren and "found
out I was on the wrong
side." "1 wanled to know what
ttie enemy was," he wd. t1J
found oot I was ttie enemy."
Fall Kills Boy
YOSEMITE NATIONAL
PARK (UPI) -Patrick
Michael K e a r n s , 19,
Redwood City, was killed
late Saturday When he
plunged 1,800 feet from at.op
W'5b.ington Column.
That'• why he worla for m . • . .
hi · ... · L.-A-: .. 1 ...,, •• important all the time. We re an inveator-owned And ~J "•• ~---..... . ... d tha•' lllce b.-vin• twO tfmployet1. You hev• to Ht11fy your company .... n · • . . h
th nooople who buy your 1ervice, by bem1 effiaent. And you eve to cu1tomen, e ..-h · · m · t·-tr. youf owners For thsy're the people w o mve1t in your be e CJent to se 1wy • •
bueineu and make the service possible.
-'-hard to .nve the beet pouible service, at reaaon.ble Thia mean• we WOT5 .. • • hip i. tJiet ,.e'ltn itep" -why we have Hrvtcemen who ar• nt ... lmt'lt« ownen . • ,.
-" courteOU• end llliDt'ul, at ••II •• ~ .mc:iant.
.n;1 the reaoa we Jook f« «e>noolin in ..,ery ••Y ,,ouible and have b~~n
abt. to reduce ~·· ratet sis tim•• in tN lat flve yean.
tt'• lllo om of the rwuom °'1r battn ... i• cro.tna. i
ADdbowf Q
A.
(
80U1H1AN COUNTIR g9 COMPANY
n-i.t-"'" C......,tf .. ,,., ~ 1.-..0 .. _ ...
..
Oon•year clock already run-_red_e_ra_l__:o~__:n_h_ou_s_in_:g_b_ill __ or_t'r_a ... se_d_. ------
Ding out for action OJl pro-
GOES TO POT
S9t. ltktl•rd Bervess
perty tax relief and other
major .lsauea.
The Assembly and Senate
wUf end the first ~tap of
the 1988 session Tuesday.
the deadline for Introduction
of bills. But prospects for
success of any measure
grow dimmer as lelislators
loot to the June 4 primary
election.
"Tbe enormity of event."
on the political front tends
to inhibit a f f i r m a t i v ,.
political action." Ll Gov .
Robert H. Finch said.
Assembly Speaker Jess<'
M. Unruh (D-Inglewood).
has told colleagues he want."
a legislative recess from
about May 17 to June 17 for
the primary. nus would
give legislators a little more
than a month in Sacramento
following last week's Easter
vacation.
Unruh and Senate Prcsi. Phone pact dent pro &em Hugh M. Burns (0-Fresno). b ave 1 1 • both pre<J:lcted little success Vo.,.;._g Held .fOr pr<fPerty tax relief plans '\.A.II. advocated by Gov. Reagan
and by legislators. SAN FRANCISCO (UPJl The running score of
-About 20,000 employes o( legislative m e a s u r e s in·
Pacific Tele~ Company troduced so far is almost the
voted over the ~kend on a same as last year·s mid-April tally -about 2.665 new three-~ c o n t r a c t Only about 3.5 bills have
proposed by the company. been enacted ~idw law this
Results o( Ule two-st.ate year. _/
ted to Reagan already has an-balloting were expec nounce4 he will postpone un-
be announced today· ac· til nut year the attempted
cording to a spokesman for overhaul ol Califomla's tax
t h e C o m m u n i cations structure that he proposed
Workers ol America. in bis .. 'State of the St.ate"
A vole on the same pro-mena~ in January. The
posal wm be conducted governor's-plan for property Tue~y by S,500 members tax relief through aid to
of Local 9410 in San Fran-county governments now i~
<Uco. stalled before the Assembly
Pacil'k: 'l'elepttoM said il!i Revenue and Taxation Com-
orCer was the largest ever mittee.
.. , .
Treat yourself
to a cool summer
perm ... at a budget
~wise Penney price!
APP'Ol:~MINT 7 9 5
We're .. ;c;s:.~: childr9"0l l\olrf ~ • • •" "•., ... !2
We spetiolize in the core of foshion wios
UH YOUl PENNIY CHARGE CAlD-made to the CWA. providini: Among important lrl!isla·
pay rai~es of $4.50 to S21 per tinn proposrd bx Democrats --------------------, werk under a $23 mill ion and Republicans: I
package. However ! hr -Repeal of the numford
CWA's bargining comm1tlee open housing law. Sen. Johrl
has recommended rejection G. Schmitz tR-Tustin). says
l'ULLlllTON
!'lrt nt!'falr C.,,, ..
1"d lloor, tll·.u.ll
HUHTIHOTON HAt M
"'unlilfl!oft C""1tr
'"" 11-. m.m1
NIWl"OllT llACK
"•~len ltlt ltd
ll'CI floor, U..Ult
of the contract. _.:1~1"'.__'~v~ill~p~r~es~s~f~or~pa~s~sa~g~e~o~f~===:.================~==·
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturcley
•We brin1 ....... 1!
• """""'o .. I
Shop at
home!
CALL COLLICT (21i) 611 04•1
OR
~'~~I~ liCi TODAY I
Wall-to-wall carpeting in
3 of our most popular styles!
S.114 .i ... ,.,. th ... in l11a11rio11•
"cebblealene" pattern of lOOofo
contlnueu• f110111e11l nylen. ltu99ed
n"41 lent -.eri11g. honcftelff choice
for ony cfKer. ''"''Y cto11i,te j11te
bee~.
6.49~.y4.
Ceo: ...... , ..........
Co,,ti""9Ut filttment nylen pile In
ric h twffdy to11 ... ltetisi. plllint,
shredding end fu11i11g. Stotic·
resislont-won't ott1oct d1r1 er dutt.
Now oveitoi,te et 'e11ney'1 low,
low price!
7.49~.~· c:...,1 •• ..., i. .........
"' '•"' 501 "''-' ........... de1111 hi9h·,....1"p 11lle tfeftM I"
on u citing +.llht'9d dMll"• S..ln
,.,;,tont, eety fe •pat clHll. Cl>t~
fro111 9reot .. 11th •nd ~
7.49~.~
C...•l•t-'Y iMNft-4
~
' I
•
JO DAILY PILOT
M STIANGI WC*!>
Of
MR.MUM b
MondlY, Aprtl 15, 1968
u r: Jt
rf
Rocky's Backers Ha ve
Difficult Goal Set
By WALTER R. MEARS
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
group of Republicans pro·
moting t h e presidential
coose of New York G<>v.
Nelson A. Rockefeller has
set for itself a difficult task:
To change in a month OT two
tile course of their party.
That course appears to be
propelling Richard M. Nixon
toward t h e presidential
nomination.
This is not the first time
Rockefeller partisat1s have
organized in an attempt to
alter it.
The new . Rockefeller-for·
President C-OTnmittee i s
counting heavily on recent
obange.s in the Democratic
picture lo turn the GOP in
its direction. The crucial
change: President Johnson's
M a r c b 31 announcement
that he would not seek or
accept renomination.
STEP SBACK
Ten days e a r 1 i e r •
Rockefeller had s t e p p e d
back from the brink of ac·
tive candidacy. declaring
himself available but not
running.
"I am not a candidate
campaigning, directly or l.n·
d.i.rectly , for the presidency
of the United S t • t e s , ' •
Rockefeller said then.
That prooooocement led
to ttle dismantlillg ol tie
draft committee aet .., by
Maryland Gov. Spiro T.
Agnew. It wu geared to a
May 28 ~goo primary
oontes.t between Rocbtellec
and Nixon.
Sen Thruston B. Morton,
R-Ky., and hia 8Sllisitant.
Duff Reed, toot tile next
step, announcing creation of
sOJMt!llnc C9lled the Coali·
tion for a R e p u b 1i c a n
Alternative.
WHAT NEXT?
Actuaily, it waa a ooalitwn
of. Utt.le zoore than those two
men. It was designed to bold
things together, if postible.
While the Rockefeller group
figured out what lo do next.
The committee represeats
that next step. One of its
organizers, Rep. Charles E.
Goodell or New York, COO·
ceded "It's an uphill fight.
'I'be odds are against us."
But be said the organization
can succeed in its efforts to
turn ttle party t o w a r d
Rockefeller.
Morton said this could be
done· in a month. "We'll
have more deleg~tes lined
up in four weeks than a
mule can haul," Morton
said.
But that figurative mule
could face what amounts to
a Nixon steamroller.
Tbe Rockefeller partisans
are counting on several
things -none of which is in
evidence yet -~ bolster
their cause.
SECOND THOUGHTS
First, they b e 1 i e v e
Republican leaders who ten-
ded toward Nixon will have
second thoughts n<1W tnat
Johnson bas stepped out of
the competition.
That leads to the prospect
of a GOP ra<:e against New
York Sen. Robert F. Ken.
nedy, undeclared Vice Pres!·
dent Hubert H. Humphrey,
or Minnesota Sen. Eugene J .
McCartily.
Rockefeller IMD feel ttle
changes in the Democratic
picture warnnt a ~e in
the Republican outlook. But
there was DO open rush to
Rockefeller after Johnson
stepped aside.
Morton said bi.s group also
is looking towacd the
Republican governors as a
party constituency. 1 t s
pr~essors have looked
there before and found few
governors ready to declare
themselves for Rockefeller
--OT anybody else.
The Kentucky s e n a t o r
said be expects 19 or 20 of
the 28 ReiQ>lkan governors
will wind up in t b •
Rockefeller camp.
Tet Offensive Robs
Viet People's Security
By BARRY KRAMER
SAIGON (AP) -The
Communllt Tet offensive
robbed a million South Viet-
namese of security. officlal
U.S. atati.Uca showed today.
Mllllona of others are living
in areu Witb less security
than before .•
The figures, compiled by
computer 1rith information
from South Vietnam'• cities
and 12, 73& hamlets, also
showed that the Viet Cong
brought 326,()11 more people
under total cdbtrol.
Hundreds of thouiands of
persona who formerly lived
in secure areu now live in
areas cl&lled as "con-
tested."
The statiatks are those or
the U.S. Embauy's Hamlet
E valuation System -m;s
-which bas been providing
computer a n a I f s e s of
security ln South Vietnam
since last December.
The HES analysis showed
fH percent of South Viet.
nam's 17.2 million people
living in seeure areas on
March 31. This compares
with 67.2 p er c e n t bn-
mediately before the Tet of.
tensive, a drop of 6.2 per·
cent 'land the lowest in more
than a year.
The population living lo
con~ areas grew from
16.3 percent to 20.7. Now un-
der Viet Cong control are
18.3 percent of the popula·
tJon compared with 16.4 per·
cent before Tel
TbU means that 1.093.181
persons who formerly lived
ln secun area& are now in
contested or Viet Cong
areas. The number or people
in secure areas dropped
from 11.5 million to 10.4
million. The number of peo.
pie in Viet Cong-controlled
areas jumped from 2.8
million pre·Tet to :U million
March 31.
There were S,331 secure
hamlets before Tet and 4,M9
at the end of Mareh. The
number of c o n t e s t e d
hamlets went fTom 3,593 to
4.084. Viet Cong control o-
panded from 3.&18 bamleta to a total of 4.093.
HYPNO-DYNAMICS
CAN HILP YOU!
• lOSI WMHT • COlft10l NllftS • S1'0f IMO.IN• e _, SILP COWlllCI
NO DIU~O Pl.LS MO SIDI lllflCft-4All
AU Tll .. TM911'T I Y ~· DOC'TWI 9111\.Y
CAU TOOAY fOI NII ce-LJAW
1111111111 °' CAUllOmA IUft HYPNOfn AllOCIA~ ......... ~ .... 635-1316
mt W. LA rALMA ..,"' ~ ............ 1nw1h 1un10 • MOO«MVttn
save on spring coats
lovely shapes, styles
22.99 regularly 40.00~6.00
__ .. ----'
This season's favorite fashion coat silhouettes in classic
designs with lovely detailings. Choose from our lovely
assortment of fabrics and colors. Hurry, you'll want
more than one at this great savings.
may co boulevard coats I 03, misses coats 27
savel famous brand
all-in-one shaper
5.99 12.00 Talue
A never-before low price on this popular new under-
fashion. Now you can have the comfort of simple under-
dressing with a one-piece shaper that gives you real
figure control, and real freedom. In white, 32-38 B. C.
may co foundations 44
save on famous dress ahOM
in a wide collection of styl•
6.99 comp. •alue' 12.00 to 14.00
Save up to half on these famous brand d.resa shoes in
calf, patents and suede. Many stylee and oolora to
choose from. Hiela come chunky, mid or high. Black.
brown, red, green and more. In broI.n .. lizes. -
may co mbden:rte shoes 12
...
save on luscious
fashion furs
369.00 no money down. montm to pay
Luxurious fully let-out natural mink stoles, lavish mink
trimmed black dyed broadtail processed lamb coats,
and even your favorite natural mink jackets now at this
one low prioe. Much more, so hUTT)' in!
•fur products labeled b &how eou.n1ry of ori~ of tm,pcned tw.
may co fur salon 47
Oleg Cassini stockings
and panty hose sale
99c to 2.99
Stockup and save on beautiful fashion stockings and
panty hose by famous Oleg Cassini. Seamless sheers,
stretch sheers, comfortable pantyhose and even fashion
sheer support stockings. Hurry for the buys.
may co hoeiery 1
• •w up la'flll91 on . .,,
IWDDl•r floral print fabrics
79c ,,.. 1.11 eo 1.so
W atcb yoiir savings grow at our sale of garden print
fabrics. Pick prints patt~med with everything from da.it·
iN to delicate Oorala to big, big, bloom& All in summer-
rigbt cotton broadcloths in 44/45" wid.tha. Save tool
may co ia:brica 4, 5, 5'
may co south coast plaza, IClll clMgo fr••way at brlstol. coda IMICI; 5461321, 675-3411
shop monclay tllfOUCJh satunlay, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 ~
' -~ ~y-----..-~ ----------
)
J
--
M~, April 1.5, 1968 DAILY PILOT !I
Political 8pectevs Spooking Presidential Campaigns
POR'IUND. Ore. (UPI)
-'nle poHtieal SbOlt of Pr.-ident JobMoA and the
flckeri.QI t.elevia:ioo image
o( RooaJd Reqan are bawl-
tini tbe campalana of three active c a n d i d a t es ln
Onp'a p r e $ l d e 11 t l a 1
p-tmary.
iekvllMb ••spot" ~.r-..... -----~------;.,,.....~~~---..;:._~~~~~~~~ ...... ~--~~~~~~"""'!"~..,...~.....;~--~~~-------------------------------------------------
merdala .. b8la& ueed to
boOlt ... ,_...actor.
:Despite h1.s &DDOUDCement
that be would neither seek
nor accept nominetloo tor
another term, Johnaoo's
name will appear on the
Democratic ballot May 23
arainst Sens. Robert F.
Kennedy and E u g e n e
McCarthy.
Reagan, the California
governor wbo insists he is
not running for higher or·
lice: is entered in the Re·
pubUcan primary against
former Vice President Rich·
ard M. Nixon.
CUT PRESTIGE
It is unlikely that Johnaoo
er Reagan could win without
campaigning actively but a
good showing by either non-
candi<.tate COQ1d cut into tbe
prestige of the winner.
With onl)' 18 Republic.an
and 35 Democratic national
convention de1egate votes at
stake, prestige is Ule biggest
prize in the West's most
wild and woolly primary.
Oregoo Jaw places on the
ballot the names of all "na-
tionally r e c o g n i z e d • '
presidential candidates. An
individual can w i t h d r a w
Crom the r~ only by
swearing he will not run for
the presidency. R e a g a n
refused to take the oath and
Johnson announced h e
would not run after the
deadline ror withdrawal.
An ~tive "Re.agan -
for-President'' organization
is conducting a campaign on
behalI of the Caliiorrua
governor despite his con-
tin ued refusal to become an
active candidate.
Tbt "Of.._. fir tlobnlon·
Hums*NJ''" Ol'flllbaUon,
created to hPfOlt the President. hat become in-
active &ince John.Ion an·
nocmced that be would not
nm. But tbe pwp bu not
disbanded.
Even before Johnson's
decision not to run, Ken·
nedy was favored to W:.n the
Democratic primary. ~
chances probably w e r e
enhanced by the President's
announcemelrt.
STILL OP'l1MISTIC
But McCarthy's stat e
organization, which w a s
established long before Ken·
nedy entered tile race, is
still optimistic.
"We haven't lost anyone
to tbe Kennedy camp that
we )Q)ow of." I a i d
McCarthy's s tate
coordinaor, Gen& Bogan ol E:Uiene.1 "Our,,. b 1 g g ea t
organi.r.tng jof> ia finding
thingt for all of o u r
volunteers to do."
Gov. Tom McCall, a
Republican and an astute
political observer. said in an
mterview he thinks Kennedy
will win. He emphasized
that he was making a
prediction, not a n en·
dorsement.
"Kennedy is a very crafty
politician and he bas a lot of
morH?y," McCall said. "I
just have the feeling that
when the Kennedys get
moving, they are hard to
stop."
Nixon is ttie odds-on
favorite to win th e
RepubliclUl primary. Even
Reagan's backers concede
that the governor has.. little
chEIDCe of winning at loQg as
he refuses tn berom~ an ac·
tive candidate. Raze said
he could ,C<>Mider anything
Edison counselors will
plan a kitchen for you-
for nothing.
If you're an Edison customer, our home
modernization counselors will
help you develop a lloor plan showing
all improvements. They'll also
give you a check-list of materials.
Edison counselors can be helpful if
vou'rc planning to remodel or add
a r~m to the house. Bedroom, bath,
or den, they're experts in
sol\'ing house heating, water heating
and air conrutioning problems.
The coupon below will get things started.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
sCJ=, Southern California Edison
Home Modern1zallon, P. 0. Box '8, Los A/lgtlN, Callt. llOO!ll
O I'm an Edl1on customer and I've decided to modtmlre.
Plt1H tlava an Edison c.ounstlM call me.
0 I likt 1t\e id••· PIH .. •nd mt moie lftfonna!IOO.
STATE Zll'
USJNG FILM over llpereent of the vo~l-~~---------~-------~~~~~------~~~~---------------------------------------------------------------~--~--------------~--------------------to be a vktory. The group, headed by
Portlu>d savinp and lOilD
executive Robect Haze, is
using • ~ film 00
.Reacan's public We as a
stand-to for t h e non.
candidate. The film Im
been shown oo a statewide
televidon network aod ii
betng icresed at "Meet the
candidate'• gatherings.
In addUion, 1 ho rte r
NO CAMPAIGN Reac~ bu Mid repeated-
ly that be will not campaign
actively in Orefon o r
e:!Mwbere. He bu dilavow-
ed Hue'• orcantution.
But .t a receot news con·
ferecene in Sacramento.
Reagm declined to urge
Oregoni&DI not to wt. for
him.
Soviet Tourism
Said Overpriced
MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet
touriam is slowly. painfully
emerging from its Infancy
-and u it develops, the
prices go up.
director of the Soviet
RUl&ia offers tourists a
t.ute of its rich put lD the
firm of magnificent old
cblll'chea, clusic military
monuments and its own ex-
otic mixture of Eastem and
Western cultures. .
These sights can be seen
with fewer complications, as
visa restrictions, in some
categories gradually relax.
OVERPRICED
But many tourists com-
plain thal hotels a r e
overpriced and service ls
below standard.
"We used to o f f e r
foreigners a stay In a ruort
sanitorium fol' '6 a day."
says Vladimir B a b k I n •
cllrecctor of the Soviet
Board of Foreign Tourism.
''Nobody believed . us. They
thought it couldn't be any
good for that 'price'. · H you
want to sell· som-ethhrg yt>u
have to £ind· Ole .ep\imum
price -not tQQ high ilDd nQt
too low."
In an internew,' Bat>liln
seemed to be repeating a
line from a. book be bad
read on private enterprise.
An intenae man of about 40
with a fine command of
English, he la aiq;ious to
promote the SoYlet Union u
a tourist mecca.
NO COMPETITION
"You American1 t.b:blt we ·
have 110 competition ln our
country." be said with a
grtn. "Your're "r on g .
Every Soviet clty Is trying
to attract more tourists than
the other."
Babkin thinks that touris~
dlsappolnted in the past by
bad facllltiea soon will have
no complaints.
"We have flnlabed our
childhood," he said. "It was
rather normal -about 10
years."
He then reeled o f f
statisUcs designed to show
how much money and effort
are being poured I n t o
tourism be.re.
While the Soviet Union is
building up ill hotel and
reataruant fa c l 11 t I e s .
however. it Is doing little to
meet the needs of fun-loving
Western travelers.
There fa an old story
among Moscow tourists that
expresses this feeling:
NEAREST CLUB
Tourist to Motc0w cop:
Where's the neare st
nightclub?
Moscow cop to tourist:
Stocltholrn.
But for tourists looking /
for tbe feel of Russia's ·
turbulent. colorfU: p a s t~
reUcs abound. Ivan the Ter-
rible and Catberlne / the
Great have not been toraot-
ten.
Many tourists fed that the
towns o( VJaqimir and
Suzdal. datlqg to the 11th
and 12 centurits, art amoq
E\Jtope's most impre11tte &lPtl. Moscow ha1 R~d
Square. crowned with the
18th century St. BaiU,s •
Cathedral -·1 feast for the flY1~ that must be aeen
again and agaiJI to be believ·
~ .. Around the country. the
Soviet Union offers such
diverse attractions as the
old tourist capital, I.ft.
tngrad; the Central Asian
marvels, Samarkand and
Tashkent; and the !tfvlera-
lilte nsorts, S o c h I and
Yalta.
Science Shrinks Painful
Hemorrhoids
Stops Itieh-Relieves Pain
Find. Way That Both Relieves Pain
and Shrink.a Pilet Jn Mott Ca.te.
I
'68 Savings lo:
ChevrOlet gives you _
a lot more fcir a lot less.
The roomiest
4-door sedan anywhere
near its price
Aufomotive Newa rat ..
Ch.vrolet the roomi.tt sedan
in Its field. Roomier, In fact,
than any ather American
car except one high·prked
luxury sedan.
lmpal• Cuatom Coupt A wider,
•
'68
surer road stance
For greater stability and
precise handling, Chevrolet
hot the widest front and
rear tread at Its price. That
CO\'ers a lot of ground.
Now get more value for /t$j on
all 68 Chevrolets and Cheve//es .
Save five big ways on popular
VBs automatic tronsmi1sions,
power oulsts, sporty items. Setter
hurry. 1hou9h. Offer's limite.d. Set
yo ur Chevrolet dealer right owoy
dunn9 his '68 Savings Explol
The silent ride
of quality
•
Bolanclng, cushioning,
ilOlating, ctiauiJ tvning-
all contribute to the
extraordinarily quiet
Chevrolet ride.
Dressed up,
not stripped down
Start with one of our low-
priu Ch.vrolets, add the
"dress up" features you like
best-along with those at
'68 Explo savings-and
you'll probably still pay
leu than for a medium·
price car with nothing on it.
A wider choice
of power teams and
custom features
Mor. qlM·tranlmiuion
comblnotions to dtoOM from
than any ~r In its fi•ld-mony at
'68 Explo savings. And oll the
CIOft'lfom yau could osk for.
'"''"'"'
lonus Savings Pion 1 Any Ch evrolet or Cheve//e with 200-~p Tur6o-Firt VB,
Powerglide and whilewo lls.
lonu1 Scrvinp '1on 2 Any Ch tvtolt t or Cheve//t with 250.hP. T urbo.firt VB.
Powerglide and whitewalls.
8onu1 Sovln91 Pion 3 Any rtgular Chevrolet with 250-hp Turbo-Fire VS. Turoo
Hydro-Motic ond'wh1tewolls.
lonus Sovln91 '1on 4 Now. for the first lime ever. big savings on power disc broku
0110 power 'leering when you buy an y Chevrolet or Cheveff e with VB engine.
lonus Savings Plan S Buy ony Chevrolet or Chevel/e V8 two· or (our-door hardtoA
model-sove on vinyl top. tlectrlc clock. whee/ covers and oppeoronce,guord Items.
New Tor\. N.T. (SP«t1f): Sci-•~) took 'j!lace. The H«et 11
~nd hu tound a 1peclal foe· PrtJJ11rotl1n• R•. Thu~ ls no
mul& wlt-h the 1billi,,, tn m~t olhtr fOl'mula for h~1t1°''1 l.111tla
caaea-to ab.riDt hemonboldt, Ilka It. Preparation ff a lto •tot, lt.ehlnr and relieve pal•. .ooUiu Irritated tluuu and
n C&le a0fler C~!· df:!f fl ht)p• pttttnt.fartbPT inftetlOll. e
proftd. wh e IC'tfllv re 1 "' la o'in--tor--1•-form. '---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Happening nowot your Chevrolet deolor's, o tremendous explosion of extra buying power. Onty·the leoder could make it happen.
l>aiA. acbl&J n 11.CUOA (lhrink· ......., ... ,...,..... -•1
j ' ••
• • .. .. ,, .... --. -. ·--.....:.... ... ..-.. ·-
II DAILY PSLOT
Peace Site
By LEWIS GULICK opposing sides pub 11 c I y day, OL the growid the BaDel ........ to U.S. pro-tlDdillC ,..C. fJlrlf11 W.
WASHINGTON (AP) declared their readineaa for capital of Com m u Jl h t ,_. ,... att. Ill ..mel A,_. Barr J •a I '° u. s. officials say the contacts. And on the record, Polaod Would not provide a OUlllDlll.. -., _._. W...., « Pllllcm 'PtU 1f
Scalpel
Stops
Blood
lengthening ba~sle between the manf<llverlng to <IN bas ne..,., lair •ttJ.ni. Mid ai. lflltlt Wn•mMt, the Nd VW• "' imllt.
WasbtDgton and Hanoi over involved only inltlal talks-'nit Norih V1etnamMe .,..... .. w .. w pro-be II .US .. be pr We
a site fo1 preliminary talks rather than negotlatJoo.a -have .o fat refllled to ate· ,........, W Jll"toudy la-lmd llr MJectim o1 a
signals the kind of dif. aimed only at 1ettln1 the cept U. S. lite suggeatiCIDI dleMlll t1ae7 Jlldlr a Allan oeutral DltiaD ..._. both
ficulties expected when and stage for an actual peace that ate .Ir.Down to lnclude i..-a W a am e d aides baw dlplomatfic ac-
lf peace negotiations get conference. Oeneva. S w l t z e r 1 a n d ; ~ allo deemed ac· credltatlc:n and frQltlee U•
under way. The White House objected Raagoor:, Burm a ; Vien-wptabl1e 1'71hilbballlOD. lit for npkl, pn-. COID·
CHICAGO (UPO -The Tbey noted-It has been to Warsaw, Wblcb tbe North tiane, Laos; New Delhi, lo-·W'llill PNtldeat Jobuoa m11Aleatloa1 b..:t to
picture wa! clear. Guided _m__:_or.....:e_th.....:.....:a.n.....:.....:a_w_ee_k_s_lnc_e_tti_e __ v_1e_tn_am_es_e..:.proposed--=---Th-ur_s_-_di_.•....;.:_J_a_tarta __ • _In_do_n_e_m_..;.~--:..;._ __________ ..;._ __ ...;.. ______ r...;epor:...-tedly_--=-_'-__ Dlllt_Tllled __ oat __ w_..., _ _....~_-. _____ _
by a surgeon's hand, an
eight-inch-long cylinder witb 1 what loolts like a spark
shooting out of t.he tapered
point was cutting through
the slon on a monkey'!
head There WM no blood.
The cutting ed~ of the
surgeon's ''scalpel" was gas
hotter than the rurface of
the sun is beliewd to be.
The indsion could oot bleed.
The new surgieal scalpel
w 33 !bown in operation for
the fim time publicly in a
film flashed over a 11>-lndl·
square screen at the 36tb
annual meeting of the
American Associatioo of
Neurological Surgeons.
LONG TESTING
The extubit was prepared
by the Univemty of Utah
Colle-ge of Medicine. where
Dr. Theodore S. Roberts. 41.
chairman of the division of
neurological surgery a t
Uta.h, has exclusively tested
1lhe "blood}~. scalpel" dur-
ing the last 16 months in
· more than 100 opel"ationl on
llJinea pigs, rabbits, rats
and monke~.
Roberta said I u r t h e r
reseatth will be condooted
before ·any plans are made
to ~ it on human tissue.
but be Eaid the scalpel
shows particular promise in
tt\e field of neurosurgery.
Roberts explained the new
sur~cal device as Interested
doctors watched the screen.
1be Instrument, called the
''plasma. scalpel," u E e s
radio frequency energy and
argon to. produce a highly
ionized gas that f l o w s
through the tip of the in-
sulated band piece at a tem-
perature above 1 0 , 0 0 0
degrees centigrade ( t h e
sun's surface is said lo have
a surface temperature of
6,000 c.) that vaporizes the
moisture in tissues, leaving
a hemorrhage-free incision ,
he ~ald. The devivice is
operll'ted by electricity.
GOOD RECOVERY
The neurosurgeon said the
animals experimented with
ha\e made a r o u l i n e
r ecovery and that year-old
tJssue history i n d l c a t e s
normal wound b e a I l n g .
normal i:car tissue, no
adverse side erfect and no
damage t o s \1JT'OUftCiin g
t:Wue. 1.1e name plasma, wt.en
applied to the new scalpel,
denot~ a high-temperature
ionized gas.
Tbe device was developed
by Forrest G. Brayshaw, :n.
,., electrical enginffr. at
the University of Utah
M::;iieal Center in associa-
tion with Hogle-Ke~. a
private Salt Lake City firm
which has experimented
with plasma gas for use in
mi111?ral se paration.
The primary advantage of
the "pl~a s c a I p e I • ' '
Brayshaw explained. is that
1· elimrnates bleeding, and
thus cuts the ti~ a surgeon
spend~ on an operation by
as much as 80 percent.
'"The length of ttle plasma
'torch' is adjustable from 1·
64th to ~2 lnch." he said.
Although it cuts through
ti•sue with seemingly no in·
terference, "it will not ignite
cc mbus1ible gas."
SF.ALEO OFF
· The scalpel does not
leave the wal\,g of the in·
ri~1on burned." he said.
"lns1ead, the blood vessels
?1 e sealed oH by a thln
layer of coagulum. The
r loel s t e r i 1 i i • s and
cautemes the b\ood as it
Ct' .. "
During one OpeT-ation on a
mon key's back, Roberts
said, forceps accident.Uy
n•ntured a F:mall vessel.
Wilt\ a touch of the plasma
tip. he said, the bleed.int
stopped lmmediately.
The operationt haw in·
eluded deep ind1ions in the
most v~ puU of the
body without drmni any
hlood, he said, thus aaving
the considenble t I m e
usually requil'!d to clamp
oH bleeding vene\s. He said
this negated the problem of
blOOd obscur:tng vhfon end
reduced the need f o r
transfusions. {'"_,,,,,,,,,.,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
!! The i ~ 0r.,. eo.t'• I f Most Com,,...
., PRINTING
f S'91YICE
• " • :-
The new ·.
Mercedes-Benz 220· Diesel:
so "over-engineer:e.d''
you may-sti:ll be·
drivi-ng it i·n 1988.
@ Some Mercedes-Benz Die-
~ls just won't quit. In the
32 years since Mercedes·
Benz invented the Diesd-
Powered passenger car. over 500,000
Diesels have been made, and 87% are
still running! One owner in Stockholm
recently started hissecondmillion miles.
The newest Mercedes-Benz Diesel
is the 220 (so-called because its engine
displaces 2.2 liters). It costs $4,580:
and from the m1llion-dollar way it l&ks
and rides. many people believe it should
be classified as a luxury car.
An unconventional economy car
Mercedes-Benz says the 220 Diesel
I~ an economy car. Yes, an econo1ny car,
because it could save you more money
in 1he long rnn (say, 100,000 miles or
more) than the 8imsiest lmle economy
car you could buy. ·
T he 220 Diesel is so economical it
doesn't even use gasoline. It sips inex·
pensive Diesel £ucl at a miserly rate,
yet has enough power to cruise at 80
(where the law allows). This amazing
powcrplantdoesawaywithcarburetors,
spark plugs, and other paraphernalia of
the conventional gasoline engine.
But the engine is not the only
unconventional thing about the new
Mercedes-Benz 220 Diesel. The whole
car is" <We.r-engineered." That's the way
one critic put it. He was right. By con-
ventional standards, it is built to far
more exacti"g standards than oo:linary
motOT cars.
Wh•t elM "over-engineering"
ct1n me•n to you
The remarkable longevity of the
Diesel engine LS one good example of
how "over-engineering" works for the
man who buys a Mercedes·
Benz. But by no means does
it tell the whole story. Here
are some more examples:
A IUperiOf br8klng system
Many ordinary cars still
use old-fash ioned drum
brakes.
Today's 180-mph Grand
Prix racing cars use disc
brakes. So docs the Mer-
cedes-Benz 220 Diesel. And
not just on the front wheels,
but on every wheel. Drum
brakes arc cheaper, but tests
prove that disc brakes pro-
vide the most precise brak-
ing possible-at a"y spetxL
So Mercedes-Benz eng i·
necrs insist on 4-wheel
disc brakes as standard
equipment. With 42 1.1
square inches of braking area, it's vir·
tually impossible to outrun the 220
Diesel's brakes.
10,000 body welds
Most conventional cars have a sepa·
rate body and chassis, held together
with bolts. After a while, the bolts can
work loose. On a washboard road, the
rattles can be tkafeni"g.
Mercccles-Benzeliminttted the body
bolts. In their place are over 10,000 in-
dividual welds. Result: a structure of
immense strength and rigidity. After
50,000miles or so, you'll wonder if your
220 Diesel wifl ever rattle.
A patented suspension
Conventional sedans usually have
a little device called an "anti·sway bar"
nestled in the froni suspension. It pre-
vents the car f com leaning on hard
turns. W ithout it, the car would wallow
(or the springs would hav~ to be made
so stiff that the ride would be ruined).
Mercedes-Benz engineers took this
idea one step further. They added a
~e'*"' anti-sway bar at the rear, part of
the 220 Diesel's new-and patented-
indepcndeot rear suspension. This al·
lowed the Mercedes· Benz engjnecrs to
make the rear springs softe:(, too. Result:
a vastly superior ride, but still no mush,
sway or wallow-even in hairpin turns.
''F~'Mats
Take a day-long trip in some cars
and you'll wind up feeling like a damp
washrag.
The Mercedes-Benz 220 Diesel is
engineered as much for human romfort
as it is for mechanical efficiency. Ortho-
pedic physicians were consulted in the
design of the 220 Diesel's seats so you'll
have ~ SM1'f'0'1 on cross~try
tours as welJ as short hops to the super·
market. Wben you 6rst slip into one of
the 220 Diesel's card'ully contoured
seats, it may seem 6rm, but once you
get used to it, yau'U nner settle for
"wumh'"4llow" suts agai". Merced&
Bem engineers have respe.ct for your
backbone.
C"p coupon tor brochure
For more details on the 220 Diesel
and 6 other Mercedes-Bent models,
send today for your copy of the r~ 24
page color brochure (coupon at right).
Bcttu yet, visit 0ur showroom. See
and drive the new 220 Diesel. Find out
how it reels to drive a car built to be
the best-not just the best seller.
.,
14 911Dll...,o••• "'''''' fr'Olft S21.7119 to ......... .
The legend of Mercedes-Bent t);~
sds has grown to Brobdingnagjan pro-
portions. There are same people who
rirmly believe M~rcedn·Ben~ makes
~Xt Diesels. Not rrue. In fact,
M Benz.builds 1 wide range of
gasoline-powered models, &om the
'
..
awesome 600 to the thrihy 220 (a car
very much like the 220 Diesel, but with
a regulaT gasoline engine-for people
who are diffident about the virtues of
the Diesel engine). They include: I
600 Grand Merceda •• · •••• $22,472•
300SEL Limousine........ 9,48~
280SE Coupe . • .. .. .. .. .. 9,262•
280SL Roadster . • • • • • • • • • 6,568•
280SE Sedan • • • • • • • • • • • • 6,336•
250 Sedan ••••••••••••••• 4 5,150* '• 230 Sedan ••••••• r....... ~,63 J•
220 Sedan . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4, 446•
. I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • 181) TODAY FOlt ' . ---: llMBMOCHURI ,..:~ r r
: (or bdllrr ]Ct. come
: ia md pct cae up)
f I . . "'·... r.,
·~ : ...... _ .. ,..,be.
: 1JI Wm Waner A,_.
• .... Alla, c.m.... ""' ..
: P'--tJ.e ... ~ lalkol. : bftdam. tb8t edJa aJ1 ~ cM DtW CID
: fnm Maade.Bem. • • : Name~----..;._ _______ _
• • : Addraa.------------~ • • : Q~~------~----~ • • •
...... -. ... .. . . . .. .... -. -·-
BI A ANDIRSON, Editor
MMMy, Mii U, INI 11&.CM , ... t•
Neptune Boll
Sea Kingdom
Awaits Ruler
A 11voy~ge to the bottom of the sea" will be navigated by Newport
Harbor Spastic League members and guests Friday, April 26.
And. when they arrive at their destination on the 10th annual cruise
they will <!fscov~r the r e a I m of King Neptune and booty in the f~rm of
money which wi!J be used to support spastic children and young adults in
Orange County.
Balboa Bay Club, setting for the soiree. will be transformed into an
un~erwater ~onderland with the use of sea green and sky blue decorations,
which are bemg created by the young adults at the United Cerebral Palsy
Center, Santa Ana, u n d e r the leadership of Mrs. Ruth Kotlar. Inter•
spersed with the lavish embellishments will be arrangements of f r e s h
spring flowers. • 1
Festivities will get underway at 7:30 p.m. on the quarter deck dur·
lng ~ cocktail hour, which will be followed by dinner and dancing to the
music of the Society for the Preservation of Big Bands.
. As gaiety is intertupted and a hu$b comes over merry-makers. the
rolling of drums . and sounding of trumpets wilJ signal the long-awaited
moment -the traditional highlight of each ball when King Neptune is
announced.
He then will be escorted to t.9e throne where be will be given the
royal manUe and crown. Selection is made on the basis of contributions of
time. effort and wisdom toward the betterment of area youth.
Also honored will be past kings, J. 991-Stoddard , 0. W. Richard, Dr.
Tom W. Robinson. John B. Kilroy, Judge Robert W. Gardner, LeRoy Bar·
tholomew, former Senator John A. Murdy Jr., Dr. Anthony Toto and Dr.
Ted Schoppe.
WHO'LL WEAR THE CROWN? -The throoe and royal
crown await JJ68's King Neptune whose announcement
highlights the Spastic League's.annual Neptune Ball. Wait-
ing to crown the new sovereign is Mrs. Wayne J. Sub-
casky, while Mn. Robert B. Woodard and Mrs. William
E. Fisher (left to right) a.re ready to offer congratulations.
Mrs. William E. Fisher is ball chairman. and serving on her com·
mittee are the Mmes. John R. Davies Jr., ways and means; Warren Poi·
tras. decorations; Wayne Subcasky, William P. Thomas, R. P. Conally,
George H. Jones, John T. Hogan. William Q. Wilson, Donald Langille, G.
R. Jansen and George W. Weedon .
. 'Can ~Do' .Passwords -........ ~ .... ). '\··,,.
To Volunteers' Cheer
A new door is about to open for members of the Volunteer Bureau.
With a s,uccessful year coming to a close, members will gather at
noon in the Versailles re.staurant next Wednesday to install next year's
officers.
Making sure the door to the future swings free and wide will be Mrs.
Thomas Young of Newport Beach. who will become president at the llth
Annual Installation Luncheon, whose theme is Cheers for Volunteers.
Assisting her will be Charles Catonese of Costa Mesa, vice president,
Mrs. Robert Young of Ne.wport Beach. secretary, and Mathew A. Hall of
Newport Beach, treasurer.
Joining the board of directors will be Mrs. W. L. Geffeny. Mrs. Rich·
ard B. Cramm and Mrs. Harvey McClure, all of Newport Beach, Mrs.
James H. Edwards and Robert Basmajian of Santa Ana, Mrs. Frank Lynch
of Corona del Mar and Mrs. William Farnsworth of Balboa.
Newcomers to the advisory board are David M. Flournoy of Laguna
Beach and John Hopwood, Mrs. Ignacio Lozano and Mac Renfro, all of
Newport Beach.
Giving advice on how to keep the door to progress well-oiled will
be Mrs. Alexander Ripley of Los Angeles, president of the Association of
Volunteer Bureaus of America. Her topic will be The Volunteer Bureau
in 1968. The guest speaker is an officer of the California State Board of So-
cial Welfare, the Child Welfare League of America, the National Social
Welfare Maembly, the American Heart Association, and the Welfare Plan-
ning Council in addition to being chairman of Plays for Living of Southern
California.
"The key words in our social development today are planning, in-
volvement, commitment and partnership." declares Mrs. Ripley.
"We volunteers should be the watclldogs of change and in so doing
must stress the qualities of patience. tolerance and understanding. We
must relate our activities to our growing communities, always guarding
against overlapping of agencies."
The annual report by outgoing president Mrs. Lozano wiU stress the
work of the Volunteer Bureau in obtaining volunteers. "1be need is constant and varied," says Mrs. Lozano. "Teens and
adults. men and women are used in interviewing and placement. friendly
visiting, work with children, arts and crafts or driving cars.
"Others help in clerical duties, in well-baby cllnics and library work,
as teachers' aides and hospital assistants and in aiding the blind and deaf.
The bureau welcomes inquiries from volunteers from 9 a.m. to noon, Mon-
days through Frida,ys.,.
EAGERNESS OPENS DOORS -And if that's true. members of
the Volunteer Bureau won't have any obstructions in their path.
Inspecting the group's oflices which are filled with awards prov-
ing the extent of eagerness are (left to right) the Mme1. William
of directors , Thomu R.
ramm, another new board.
Postman Rings Twice, So Take Ann' S and Hus~nd' s Advice
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus-
band died five yewa ago and left me
<Nltb two fine eon•, ages 8 and 8. Seven
months ago I married a bacbelor. He
liked my boys and they liked hlm. On
occasion be woald complain about
their behavior and say ,balf·Jokina.
"Whee I am their fatbeT T1l aee that
they get aome diJdpH:oe."
I am atraid OUl' marriage la in
clanger and I need. your help. My hus· ba.ftd bu turned frQIO ID eveD·Wn•
pertd man into l tyrant. Ile and I
!lave no problem, but bit attitude
toward the boys ts bon1ble. e. ,_,,
they are ill·mumered. trreeponlible,
apo1led rotten. I say they are high-
aplrlted, energetic, normal kids. True,
tht)' punch each other sometimes \n
the back seat of tbt car, but then all
.brother• do. When we go out tor din·
ner they 4loo't alway• b e b a v •
I •
ANN LANDERS ~
perfectly: they spill things and make a
little too macb noise. So wha1!
r .. always taho the boys with me
In the tvt.nlnf, to dinner and the
theater and .UlUq friends. (I felt this
wu compouUoa for b e I n g
·fatherleu.) Now they eiq>eet to go and
I aer 'thJna wront with taking them.
I told my huaband I was writing to
you and be aatd he was going to write
to you also. Of cOUne be never will.
Can l OU give mt some help please? -
PHOENIX ,
De• Pltot•x: Tiie leUer ,.. wl"rf'
,.re 7"" •nbnll ...wa•a wrne ar·
mt41 _.. .... dQ u Jtvl. Here It Is _ ........... :
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wife in·
formed me 1be wu wrltin.J to you
about my abusive b'tltment of her
two IODI. I told be.r ( WU IOing to
write and give you Ole other side o(
the 1tory. Please l>Gb'tlsti my Jetter If ypu decide to p11bli11l ben.
M1 wlfe ~r1 the b o y •
"normaJ." I MJ the, beve been
pampered. catered to and are totally
und isciplined. They have no regard for
their mother whatever. When she asks
them to do something they Ignore her.
The teachers complain because they
are irresponsible and m o u t h y .
Recently we took tht boys on a Dl-
mUe motor trip and they fought in the
back seat until I became so annoy
stopped the car and gave them
Wbact. A few mJnutts Later, 11 we
were going about eo mUea a our. one
of the bots hit me on from
bfhl.nd and we verJ ne went Into a
4ltcb. My wile lns.lsta taking these kids
to dinner and on lcbool night.a
wllich I retJ geoua. U they are
,too Ured :;el up tbe Dell d_, lbt
Itta tb aleep. SIM 1111 they need
the feelint of s
need to go to
1 love m Ile and I want this mar-
riage to ork. I told her befOrt> we
that I would help her raist
th ys and she seemed agreeable.
w she says. "They are MY sons.
ave them alone."
I hope you will COUOJel US in print -
B.G.W.
DEAR B.G.W.: I'm adclttsahtt my
remarks to your wife aJnc:e o e ta tbe
oae wbo Meda It.
Get with It, Mother, or you are going
to have two worthless sons and a
lonesome old age. Your husband has
the right Idea. Welcome his firm band
-lt Is badly needed. Kids who are
allowed to do u they please do not
crow up happy ud aecure. They sro•
up unmoUvat.ed, irresponsible and
miserable.
CONFIDENTIAL TO : THIS TIME rr·s REAL: It's real nothing. Yo11
ml1st have round the screwball with a
Gelger counter. Girls who marry lor
money (ind it's tbe hardest work there
is.
Row •ill JOU bow wbea the real
lhlDC comes alon(1 AU Ami Lutlen.
Send .for her booklet "Love or Sex ....
How to Tell the Dlfferenee." Seid •
cent• to cola ud a lon1, t1elf.ad-
dre11ed. lltllmped nvelope wttll yov
reqoe'lt.
Ane l.andert will be 1l1d to ltelp )'M
wtth yoar problem1. 8ftd Ute• tt '-
11 ure of lite DAU.Y PILOT, me._.
..... 1011, Hlf ···~ ... • .... vtlope.
,• . .. . .
. ~
. .
. . . • ' •
MOl!day, April lS. 1'61
INTERNATIONAL WALi< -Zeenat Aman of
India check.II the map to locate the James ~Y
hom e where she will serve as a hostess dunng
the progreasive dinner Sunday, April 21. Help-
ing point the way are Mrs. Joseph Bell (left)
and Mrs. Earl Spangler.
Paths Lead to Exotic Food
Due to the popularity of the annual Inter-
national Walk, sponsored by Corona del Mar
Chapter of the American Field Service, the
e~nt this year is being limited.
The idea of the traditional progressive din·
ner has met with great response. Everyone
attending will have an opportunity to meet
a nd visit with the current exchange students
attending Corona del Mar High School. Res-
ervations will be stopped at 300.
Homes for the three courses featuring ex-
otic dishes are located in Cameo Shores and
wUl be open from 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday, April 21.
!
Hosting at the residence of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Bums where appetizers will be served
will be Victor Gattini of Chile and Enrique
de Mestral of Paraguay, while greeting guests
In the James Ray home for the lhain courae
will be Zeenat.. Aman of India . · •
Diners will then travel. either by foot, car
or London bus, to the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Finster where they will meet Frank Greg-
ory of South Africa.
Chairing the event is Mrs. J. R. Longley,
and reservations ~re being taken by Mrs. Jo-
seph Bell at 673-5047 or Mrs. Robert Under-
wood at 673-5280.
UCI Music Student& Given Big Boost
A total of $l500 baa been given to mule students at
UCI by the Orange County Pbilbarmonic Society.
$wing the contribution are (left to right) Paul
\ngraham, Connie Laing, Richard James, Steve
Sears
Warner and Pam Wesp. The atudenta were unani-
mouly recommended by Dean Clayton Garrison
and the faculty of the department of mu.sic, School
of Fine Arts.
Founding Feted
Members of Alpha All>ba
XI chapt.er of Beta SllJlla
Phi have been ,.ttint ready
for the group's Founders Day celebration April 30.
The group will 1atber in
the Meadowlark Country
Club in Runtlqton Beach
for tbe occasion where they
will allo hooor new officers,
the Mmes. Fred Lundriaan.
pre1ident ,Leoftard
Andenoll, \'ice preadent,
James Hamertck, recording
secretary, Dale Badon. cor-
responding 1 • c r e t a r y •
Franklin Jonea. treuurer,
and Cloyd Ben:og, council representative.
Reg; $179 Tm E~ X
Behind-the-Ear Aid
14~ UNWANTID
HAii llMOVID
PllMANINn Y-. .
Germany
Setting ·
·of Rites
SlndN Gail Gautnty of
Kornber11trUM, Bof/Baalt,
Germany, and By ml t
Sanu•l Ma,.-will be mar-
ried April 7i> in t b e
SynqafUe ol Hof/Sule.
'ftle daqbter o1 Mn. B. J .
&la "' Colt.a Mela and AJ:r Force Col R. E. GutaeJ,
&naouaced her betrotba1 '° frieadl at the Hof AJr S&a-
tkm Oftkerl" Club. Ber
father la the comm•ncttnc omc.r ot ttle air bue.
Miu GllDeJ ta • IJ'lduate ol Newport Barber HiP 8cbool ... ltudied .t <>note COllt CoBep.
The blDedld.mct, IOll "' Soklme ...,_of the Bronx
and the lMe Mrt. Mayer. at-
tended Taft Hlib School,
Bronx. and F a I b io ft
lmtitute 0 f Tectmoloo' New York City. H •
preaently 11 ltlllloned wtth
the Air )'orce m Hof/Saale. '
P'0Uowtn1 the weddlnt,
the couple will honeymoon
ID Germlll)', France aqd
Spein.
Universal
Fare Set
DiniDI tD -i1Ur1*iona1 hme wUl be members of
the Woman's Guild of the
HuntiotbJ Buch Churd:I of
Relillou Sdence.
..
FINE BAKERY
r84'1AW4 eY.liuJ
fndividu1I chocol1te c41kes, l•yerecf with
wh ipped crHm, sliced b41M1'41s, topped with
• mtrHchino cherry. J7c -.
~l~u
Chewy, ten9y, cookies fillecf w itft 41,rjcot
j1m, sprink led wi+ft powcfe,ff su9•r. 12c
,,,~~
A hHrty, full fl•vorecl lo.f, rude frotft 9
9r•ins •ncl flours. 4'c
8.llJ'~,~
Whole str•wberries encl whipped crNm be-
uke, t opped
Perfect for perties, Mch generous
servin9 l•vishly topped with whip-
ped crum end in ih own plastic
conteinerl 30c ...
12.~ L ID O CEN TE R
3433 VIA LIDO !NEWPORT BEA'CH 673-6360 Tbe Netberlaodl will be
the country honored Oii Fri· ~.April 19, at the momtllyl'===================~=====~'
potluck dinner to begin at r.::============== 8:30 p.m. In the du.arch
headquarters.
The Nedmlanck theme
will feature a lbowinl of a
movie recommended by ttse
Nttberlladl C!Cllllul • feDeral .. trulJ dlpktinC the cbarm
IDd c:uRoml "' l\ia country. Al.lo, IP'Clal exhibit.a of
Dutch art. china. and other
objects .. planned.
After an inlpiration&l talk
by the Rn. Ernat Pate . .au..ta will join in a sing· Alone featurilll popular
Dutch tuna, wttlJ Mrs. Paul
JUcUrdlon It tbe piano. a.nnan•e.....mg 1a
Mn. Robert Tarleton,
1.aated bf IDll!ka ol tbe
~ tatc.-d bl the
eulture ol 4bt ~Is
tnvtted to lie .,,.._ Each
month the dnlrdl pild will
feature • dlfftrat eoantry.
Dteoratiom, food, and
ellltMtlimned will cM?y oat
tibe twmnc'• tbtmt.
Silver Sends
The ftnt and t h tr d
T\letdaya at 8 p . m .
memben of 8Uver Sands
• N1tive Daulll~n of the
Golden West ptber for .....uap. LUe Par k
Clabhoue. H u a t In I t o ft
Buch, ta the •ttlnl for the
first lellioo wtdll Mn. Jack
Wl1lon, 548-1471, will fUrn1ab
toc.Uon information on the ttilrd meet11ur. P erma -bond:
H e l ene Curtis secr et agent
Perma-bond, the mysteriou$ ag•nt in our new B~lene
Curli8 waves, with strtmgtluning action pi.u. J>rotein ·
'rich ftOln'isliment. TM result f tw your hai'f: new
body and setting power. more luxuriant, longer-
lasffng curls. Let one of our expert of>erattws add
th'-miracZ. "4grsdi4mt to yotlr hair wilh our 'Trtumph
EmJw•,a•,.flHlve, complete with style cut, 20. oo.
In our .hnsch Room Salons. 'Triumph DUche••' wave
111itl cut, 15. oo. In our Robinaw• Salou. '
I )
' .. -.. ..
'
' • ..
L
•
• • ' • • •
. --
. . . . . . . --. . . .
M~. Aprll 15, 1%8 OAJLV PILOT JS
Sook in the Moldng?
~Better °late Than Never' -Luci N ugent
Brunch, Boutique Beckon
By BELEN TH.OMAS
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President J o b n s o n · s
daughter Luci says she
'ffould like to write a book •
some day.
UDllke her mother Lady
Bird and her sister Lynda.
Luci has not kept a dJary.
But with the President's an·
nouncement that be would
not run for re-election and
her days in tile Wba House
waning, Luci has bad a
historical awakening .
She has begun to record
some of the memorable
moments in her exciting
life. She laughingly admHs
she is a little late. But Luci
has always had a lot to say
and has never been afraid to
say it.
Scripps Alumnae will auction boutique items during a 10 a.m. brunch Thursday,
April 18, ln the Newport Beach borne of Mrs. William Eilers. Displaying some
of the tempting wares are sale chairman, Mrs. David Aronovici and Mrs.
Peter Temple (left to right). A portion of proceeds will be used to furnish
the new humanities building on the Scripps campus.
She was inspired to pu l
her tbougb1s down on tile
typewriter while aboard ttie
presidential jet recently o
the return to Washington
after accompanying b e r
father to New York. The
event was ill'S'tallatlon of
Archbishop Terence J .
Cooke.
A$ a Roman Catholic con·
vert she was proud. She
wrote:
OTHER
MERCHANDISE
30~ to~
SPORTSWEAR
4.99 to 16.99
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
0,.. .... .ttn M ........ tt11 t:JO p..-.. s.t. tlll 6:00 p.-.
I Sears I
rrp nail
condidoner
protects
your nails
helJ>8 prevent
splitting, peeling,
bre.kiog. chipping
% fluid OL
.
Brash on JUlP dailr
f« beautiful nails in
jUst 2 weeb. lUlP it
the only oatwal pro-
tein and keratin nail
conditioner. No pro-
~tive co.u: is oece~ ..,,.
CHARGE 11' on
S-..R~
Cballl'
..
Specialized Education
Reviewed at Luncheon
S p e c ialized Education
Programs will be explained
by Scott FlaoagPn. assistant
superintendent of Educa·
tional Services for the Hun·
tington Beach High School
District, at the next meeting
of the Huntington Beach
Republican Women's Club,
Federated.
A salad luncheon will be
served at 11:30 a. m .
Wednesday. April 17. in
Lruce Park clubhouse. Hun·
tingtoo Beach, by Mrs.
Arndld Podsade, hospitality
chairman, and her rom-
mittee.
Following the business
meeting. witti Mrs. William
Campbell presiding,
Flanagan will explain the
v.ariety of courses offered in
the district i n c l u d i n g
traint1ble mentally retarded,
educable mentally retardPd,
extended day programs and
continua!_ion high sc)loo!.
Tbe public is invited to at-
tend the meeting.
NB Thursday Club
Art Exhibition Slated
Balboa Bay Club will be
the scene or activity when
Thursday Morning Club of
Newport Beach sponsors an
a r t exhibition Thursday.
April 18, Crom 10 :30 to 11:30
a.m.
Mrs. Jack Wager. Art
Section chairman and Mrs.
Stepnanie Cogswell. co •
chairman, dJsclosed that the
talents of members will be
on display.
Categories included will
1---AW ARD WINNER
n>e DAILY PILOT bu won
m o r • ewardl t '" o m the Oranp County Pre• C I u b
than an7 othv newapaper.
be oils : collages; drawings
in ink. pencil, charcoal and
pastels: papier m a c h e ;
stitchery; thread designs;
felt.craft, ceramics. a n d
miscellaneous c r a f I s in·
eluding frame and moon·
tings.
Kerrneth Gee. landscape
and portrait artist. and his
wile have been named
judges.
The showing will b e
fullowed by a brunch and a
program by Fifi D'Orsay
entitled I'm Glad I'm Not
Young Aby More.
The program is beUtg err·
ranged by Mrs. Robert
Smith.
s,eclll illnUcttrJ tftw:
A 111• 11.itt Is 1•1
wttlt I ""°' ""1191 II DI hlJ .......
Buffums' invites yoo to help celebrate
a magnificent new pattern "Du Barry".
By lnternationat •, it's in the most lux·
urious weijlt sterling silver. With every
S-pc. place setting purchased, you will
get a matching goblet, at no extra cost.
Otter ends June 29th. S-pc. settingll.H
(7" Du Barry goblet in Webs1er·Wi I cox
silverplate, va1ue, 17.50)
Silverwart
. Buffurris·
"Today was an un·
believable one. For the Je-
co~ time ln hJstory t.htr~
was a stand1n2 ovation in St.
Patri"k's Cathedral <for the
President). The first was
for Pope Paul.
"Pride wa_, the word or
the day. There was not a
picket to be ~. Not an ug-
ly word spoken. J bave been
on maQY trips With my
rather. I bave been proud of
hlm many times. B1•t today
I was far from alone.
'1Todl,y wa.s wbat l hoped
for him fol' so long. A Presi·
_u um
dent who loves Illa country
... unexpressable emotions
..• be ls t.be kind of man
who loves hie country more
than hls ego."
There are lndlcations that
net.tiler LuoJ nor Lynda
particularly wanted their
father to bow ou{ and re·
nounce his political career.
But they have rejoiced in his
new image, incluQing Im·
proved pOpularlty ratlngs
amid bis new drive for
peace in Vietnam a1l<I re·
Jedion ol partisan politics.
To give ... to have!
.A collection of silverplated
table accessories in uJ oanne" or
uAmerican Rose~' by International
I
fhe simple charm of French Provincial design is beautifully interpreted in "Joanne". You can
have it in beautiful matched serving accassories. to harmonize with your table settings. This
popular pattern ·;s also available with a ro-se border. Shown above: Webster-Wilcox silverplated
tea and coffee service,. footed ••••••••••• l&0.00 20" oblong tray, footecl •••••••• 11.11
Silverwar&
USE BUFFUMS' SILVER CLUI • llOTHINGDOWll • JIO IMTEREST • ROCARRYlllGCHARGE
15" Square tray ......... 12.IO
18" Well and tree platter, footed ••• ll.8
Gravy set, 3/4 pinl capacity , ~ ••• H.•
12" Double vegetable d"11 •••••• ll.M
11" Round tray •••••••••••••• 11._M
13" Round tray ••••••••••••• 22.R
15'' Round tray ••••••••••••• 21.M
18" Oblong tray ••••••••••••• a•
20'' Obion« tray ............... .
Cove • i>utter di.sh, removeble II• liner •••••
N~T e No. I FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENTER. e 644-1200 e MONDAY, THUASOAY, ~f DAY 10:00 TILL t :JO e OTHEA..OAYS 10:00 Tt1.l ~lG
I •
------------------.. ----·-------,_ ..
J
H I C d · Secretaries Dence Club • • • • • • • • • • • a ecrest on uct1ng o r a n I e Couni1-H.arbor TN first UUrd ud ftfth p ,· I' t . Weekly . Yoga Classes Area Legal Secretaries Fridays· ~f each moDtb •· _, e
. As~ation meets the third members of Lace a n d i '
r Due to lie popularity of a way of life and a welgbt Wednesday of tbe nfon·t.b in ~~ ~p~.· :;:!~ p ' , 1•
yoga ci.. coaducted last normalize.-. ''My students varioua locations. Further ,,_.,. •
spring", m e m b e r s of informatio11 may be ob-School, Hunt:infton-Beach. ha~ .topped smo&ing aod be M ''.:.. Ha.lecnlt Club*• deaign-im..-ved tlbeit Mill in tained by calling Mrs. Jack further informati.oo may ., ._.,..ti • • •
ed • "'• .... c 0 u r s e .,.... " t -~ a .... -U·mber• obtained by Callin' Mrs. AJ..__ ..... -.... ..... ~ 'lburlday, Apri1 sports by COMiltent daily ~"'6• ~· nmc J Oillo t ~ wi• -... ._ to
18, dilldoNd y_.,_., Allea.~use~o;;;f~y;;og~a~, ·=· •;he;· ::;•~lid.~==;;'a;;th~er~a~t~7~p~.m;·=====ua:n===n=a===·=:;lwba1 to do? ...., ... sua Nellon, 1'01& "'8trud«. an eyema, a tbe mqvt
Tbe claN will tM.e place Lido or lllM. :t1M ta! W
from 9:30 to 11 a.m. in the Ultil 0.-ii IMtured at club, at 3t2S College Av•.. ...,. formw, .. ,...,.., Gbott
Cotta M--. and will coo· ~ laqba at
tinue ev«J T h u r 1 d a y 1attar · ·
1lu'OUlh .1-. 11~ Watt Ud Oert ii rho
Colt for 1t111--* will be B G in T~ on that bi&. $16 for ,&Uttt.a and $11 for wide, woGiel'!Ul ~at the
members. Mrs. R o b e r t Lido. A&adrey Hepburn stars ii
Seaney ai 540-1889 may be tbi.s lruly exciting shocker.
telephoned for reservatioos. ~· shows as a yooog , blind
The public also may reeister wife who bas tbe temble
at the-fltst meetin~. misfortune to be associated M.r.s. Nellon, atl · tru~r ·th dope ,_..,yi;... {,...,_,.,..,.,
for eight years, als teaches ':! course. ~.g, &UUV\,.~y,
classes at the Garde Gn)ve
and Fullerton YMC . She is A trio ol. hoods hold
being a&ai&ted by her for the _f ·1rst t•1me~ younc a.ct)' captlve in her 0. students, Mrs. Seaney. home, while t:bey MM"Ch for a
'ftlHe attending-the 1--1---•*'*--witiu should bring a bead\ toweL Saman1faa Jcnea, Alan Arkin.
MUSCLE BUILDING COURJI? -Mn. John R. Reilly illustrates sidebends
and Mrs. Robert Seaney (left to right) shows the full lotus position while Deb-
ora Nutting, at age 3, can hard1y believe her eyes. Debora isn't old enough
yet, but other area residents can partake in a nine-week yoga course being of-
fered by Halecrest Club members beginnini April 18.
mat or blanket and dress f ·1ne European Art Efrem z i m b a Ii. t, Jr. com.Iortably. (Auchy'1hubbyin1be ltory)
• ' Breathing. stretching. Richard Q-eana and Jact
firming and toning exercises h Weston round out 1be cast
v.i ll be stressed during this comes to t e Julie Harrol plays a key role first session," according to as a ~· By the way, Mlss
Mrs. Nelson. Jones, one ~ the hi~ paid
language Development
Meeting Told
Mfl. Edith Scllwartz, assistant professor
of =and drama at Chapman College, will te the next meetinc of Newport..
C0tta e1a Branch, American A.uociation of
UDiversity Women.
Coffee at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 17,
in Island House, Fashion Island, will precede
the di!cussion on New Directions in Lan-
auage Development by the speaker.
Mn. Schwartz received her BA and MA
degrees in ~ therapy at California State
College at Los An&eles. A Chapman faculty
member for the past three years, she bas
directed -~ and hearing clinics at the college during that time and worked with the Laguna Beach Assistance League with its
testing troaram of preschoolers !or the past
two yean.
OPll
SllDAY
to•·' 11111
M•AIN CINTll PrL Nini
1112 lewport Bl., Costa Mesa
Qullty ••limes . ... ....... ...... ....
Tlles.·WM-'nMn.--IXTIA SPICIALS
lleMTMIAU
1p.., ...... ,. ... ~~
ICONOMY llZI Vote Toolhpalle
MIU HICK
Hair Spray
CHILDltlN'S IOLID eol.D ............ ......
CUL TUltlD ,.ARL ·
lolhl ........... ~. •11.91
14k OOLD DIAMOND CINTll ...........
We Ml9 Dt Jftillry & Watch ll•l""9
DIAINIOAID I
Dlshcl,.11191' ht :J; •1.10
I •Way KrTCHIN Dlspe ............. , ... ,, ... •1 00 C'-Outwt.lle~r.;:e •
HIAVY UUIHID AMlllCAN MADI
Thenn•I alankets :7; •399
•LA.la IA.I I Q
HurrlcaH CalNlle1 .~ 69c -~ ........... .....
1' PllCI HT Of
ChlMDI ............ ,.
DYMO
Lta••I Maker 14•. a ... .._,. •3.79 .............
t DllAWll MITAL R1ec.w..,..,.,.,......19A•
WILION
.... •••• 50% °"
'9.91
~r
Gray Nominated
As Color Today
screen 1 debut in Walt l1ntfl Sh~ also defined yoga as a Newport Beach area. fashion models, makes her
Newport Bethel Dark, Ith Udo.
Peralan gray is the stock-
ing color being advanced.
Young women affiliated
with Newport Beach Job's
Daughters, Bethel 1 5 7
gather the second a n d
fourth Mondays at 7:30 p.m.
The Ma.sonic Temple is the
setting for the meetings.
Information r e g a r d i n g
membership may be ob-
Wned by calling Mr s . Walter TUJ, MS-1755.
By Bonnie and by Clyde,
by the Duh of Windsor and
by the throbbing 30s by. all
that ruffles and ripples, by
h e r r i n g b o n e and by
houndstooth, gray is the col-
or and Persian ls the gray that'• going to lead them au-;=;.========:..11
... now, through fall and BEST winter, and for a long time
thereafter. The DAILY 'ILOT offers t0111e
3336 Via Lido -Newporl Beach
Phone: 673-2722
The gray that makea them crf the !lest features, by 1etu.af talk like that ia a cross ivrvty of ~ .. c1.,., eveileltf• la The Meta Theatre invites between a fog and the steam eny newspepu In the netio1t. YOU to see another fnm in
that a tea kettle emits. Eastman color, Where Angels =-=:-=::-:=-=---===---:==i:===-=-=======::::.:.============================ Go • Troable FoDowa!, star-
Do ytu cltMd the Cllmh'f outtloor ... '°" IMca._ yeu're efreid of
beln9 Men in a bathing suit? Do
you rule out wearing n,u,....,..
vealing alacks, capris or thot11?
Now, at lost, you can lose pounds
ancf Inch" quiclcfy and tafefy this
• OM abeofutely guaranfffd way
••• and, you can do ff without
stQrvotion· dieta, pills or stren· uous exercise. ·
.....,... ... ..
••• to make you feel.
young again
to be slim again, to put yMI~
iack into I ·, ~ .. best shape of your ~i/1: · "· .,
... , ...... ..
• .... -· MIL I
c.n N.., 1..-PrH ,,..re A•al•n• ...., c..p1........,.. rr..i•e.t. = HW • • • • • • t~ ~ ~···,.."'re: ... 'AIADINA .. •a•• .. •·• ... HQP!. GreJ. ~'9WY41 • • • • • • • • • • • ......,_... "-•• •-SAN DlllO •••••••• :_. 8 ~ 11W. *'1111 --•
Cl9tSMAW. • • ••• tM .......... PIClll9 •• tn.... IMTA ANA •••••••••• 1MO W. 1*i' a: :sa...,
DOWNIT •.•••••.• 1CWOI Lab:t004ll lfwf. •• UMIJ1 MNTA UllAIA *'AS.... It. tlWln N~TON-A..'W•lOfON.St.Colt.gelf ......... 1 MW ... ::.~::100.. ............ ....
OUND•U ............• 211 Mo. c:...t .. 2464t.. TAIDMA ........ ,.11«1C v ......... ::M4 IM
LMIWOOO ....... -,_ __ ,, M .. Mt•tt TOllANCI ........ 'DTW C-IL -..n1
lONO llACN •••••••• '11 f. o..it M ..... 7a1 WAUeUT c.-.. •i ~-~ ..._:. • tra ::"°"' llAClt •••• OD '9dfk C.. Nw)' ... Ml-1611 WSicMaYB •••••. 19121,=..-. ·.,_..171 ~----.l . HOUYWOOO ...... 600 ......... ....... wrl'tr• .... , . , .... taH ..._: :.... ...
.
'
ring Rosalind Russell, Stella
Stevens and Susan St. James.
Other co•stars i n c I u d e
Barbara Hunter, Binni e
Barnes. Milton Berle. Arthur
Godfrey and Van Johnson.
In this one, Van forsakes bis
red SOX and obantes into t.he
apparel of a Catholic father
who beads a boys' 1ebool. Roz
play, Mother Superior of a
girls' school where Stella
reports as a young nun. Here
ia tba conservative older nun
who ht a~azed at the modern,
progressive newcomer who
upsets the once peaceful staid
old St. Fi'ancit Academy for
Girls.
Wiier~ Angela Ge • Trouble
FoUowa ! will provide a lot of
hearty lauP>t for film fans.
For instance, tM tJtuation
when the girls, aecompanied
by Mother Superior a n d
Siar, atay overnight at a
boja' school, the one beaded
by Van ..
Also, the stay of these
youog students mt their m.tM
at a ranch where the wiealtlly
owner baa six aona who also
have friends from ne8fby ran·
cbes.
'l1len too, Ills traveling
troupe ol femme .tudel and
nuns .-Uwolved ill an "at·
tack'' by bostlle Ind!ans .
Simplf because lletr bus pro-ceeded to drive, mi:mited, in-
to m ~where a movie was beUic lbot. Wait und1 you
identity t b • eye.patched,
lJempenmental IDoN direc· tort
' -~----•ce~------= ........ -------.... --. .,,,._·-·----~--·-·--..-.-...·-· --
-----
ears
~. -. -_.-... .. ----------
SALE .. •
~. April 15, 19&8
'Li-.
\., \,
~, -,
---;-
SAVE s1 to s3?
DAILY PIUH Jt
Famous Style S-t-r-e-t-c-h Underfashions
for Comfort, Control and Freedom
Famous Style Stretch Bras Natural Fit Long-Leg Panty
Mon! Take 1c1ion ••• freely anrl rnm-
fortably. Thia bra {ollow1 your ~v,.ry
movement. Elattic (nylon, 1pandn) @ide
ind b1ck p1nel1. Elutic front band~ rrnH
to eep1nte. Adjatt•ble 11tttch 1lrtP'· "'ly·
Jon lace cope. A32.J6. B.C3?-4-0, 0 3242.
D Sise. Regular SS.SO 3.97
"'·SO Conlour Bra ha.a IU'le fc•rum u
1bo-re, plu1 Wonder-Fil ro fill our 1n ~
tTt-een tit.ca. 32·36A, 32·38B. C. 32-400.
Regular $4.50 Be free and leel at ease in thit power
net elutic panty of nylon, Lycra* 1pan•
dex. Elaatic inner-control bandt lilt and
firm the tummy. Satin elutio panel
1h1pe• the derriere. Try it ••• you'll
look wonderful. Si.set s. M, L. XL
Regular $10
291
D SiM Bep1tt $.( 3.97
$7.50 Lonalbte Br. Litht hoainJ. 34-408, 3'-'2C. ~o. 5'1
D!iwe~· •.41
97
Phone Sean During This Sale and SA VE •.•
You Can't Do Be~r Than Sean
Santa Ana
1717 S. Main St.
Kl 7-3371
97
. \
)
• -
J f DAJL Y PlLOT MOl!Qy, Aptll l5. 1968
Psychic Income •
It's Spending That Counts
By DOROTHY A. WEN<.:K &ally. we need to eval uate. or check
c-" ....,.. AfVlw up oo ourselves to see bo.-1'e 4fd.
(lflW'• ...... Mn WM<lr .. ...... .,,,..,. GOALS DIRECT SPENDING
"' .. U.._.lly .. C•ll'-le AWk"1Wel ... The family that driltt. and lpe ds = :"".:::. '::..~w::..*:"'.:~ =.:! probably bas no real 1oala. Goal~e , ..... ,....,., -.,., important. They glvc direct.Ion to ur
lt1 our materialistic society money is spending. Famllles who have f ture
very Important. It functions u a goaa are more likely to save for m.
medium of exchange. simplifying the Dillerent famWea have d1Iferent goal& because U>ey have different
t.radl.n1 of &oods and services. valut!s. What's lmporta.e! to ont faml·
Money also serves as a meuu:r)ng ly is not necessarily important to
stick ol value. We measure tbe worth another.
of a product in terms of lta cost in For example, while one fanuly
dol.lan. wants to spend a lot ol money !01 an
Money also functions as a store or expensive automobile with all the "ex·
value. We save money foe future use. tr as." another family might p~fer to
and our savings give u1 a sense of drive a less expensive car Jn order to
security. save mooey for a child's college
Wbeo we exchan&e money for goods education.
and services we convert money in· Each fan.Uy must decide on its
come to real income. Real ineome-is--particular goals. l'hls Lake& conscioUB
the quantity of goods and services effort.
whlcti money will buy. Some families decide on family
During times of spending goals in a family conference.
Inflation when dol· Before the conference eact. family
lan lose value. member. including older children.
then real income makes a WTitten list of wants or goals
de c 11 o e s even for spendln~ (or saving) and numbers
though money In· each want m order of Its importance
come may remain to hlm.
the same. Fixed Tben the famjly gets together and douM savings als.o makes a preference list, which com-
loae value as a re-bines the wants of each member.
suit of inflation. s.nce each family memter may have
Yet another kind d.ifierent wants. compromises will
of Income. in ad· need to be made. dltlon to money
DOltOTIIY ••NC• Income and real
income is psychic income -the ut·
llfntioa galned from spending.
ting up the p1u to dlatribut. lncomt
amcng eipeDM1.
Your tn.:ol:'\t lJ what you ban to
spend alter all deductiona for mcoai.
ta.x, social security, pension plan, etc.
have been madt, Your net aaluy In
other words. Other sources of income
-interest on Avinp, profJta oo Ille
01 stocks or bonda, penaJon, rent, Upt,
etc. -s b«>* llao be included.
H your Income la inegular -for ex-
ample a saleaman's commission -an
estimated moathly avera1e sbould be
made, for example by dlvlding 1ut
year's net iJ>come (from lncome tu
forms) by 12. It' a be~ to eatlmate
low thu high.
Your upe.naes may be dUOcuJt to
detennine unless you bave been keep.
Ing some k1nd ot spending recordJ.
Some expenaes are "flxed" and easy
to ascertain -like rent or bou~
ment, ulllffY tiUJi, i D s al l m e n t
payment. and the like.
Some expenses are irTegular and
may come up only once or twice a
year -lllce auto license. insurance
payments. taxes. Yet money needa to
be allotted for them in your plan.
The best method of plan:i1n1 for lr·
regular expenses ls to make a com-
plete llit for the wbole year add them
up, tbeo <iivlde by 12 to get' a monthly
average. If this amount Is set aside
each month, a.a part of your 1pendh\g
plan, then when these billl come due
you'll have the money to pay them.
.A third part. of your speDdl.ng plan
"ill be more difficult -allotting
money to "flexible" expenses, like
food, clotbin1, recreation, tranrporta.
Uon. 1oedical and miscellaneoua.
"MR. ED11
THE BEAUTY SAL ON
proudly welcomes
these superb stylists
to our fine staff of Ha irstyling Arti sts
at the beautiful Broadway Newport.
Each is a specialist in the latest
arts and techniques of cutting,
setting and styling.
Do mate your appointment today and let
one of these talented hair designers
create a fabulous new look for you.
Beauty Salon, 601
pholli!: 714. 644-1212
.
''MR. SARABIA "
...
•
Families vary even more in psychk
income than in money income. One
lam.Uy with the same money income
as another may get considerably more
satisfaction from its S!)endlng than the
other. Why?
The worth of one want will have to
be weighed again.st the worth of others
-in terms of total family welfare -
before a priority listink can be made.
When the list is completed. the family
has made conscious choices over the
direction they want their spending lo
take.
The next very logical s~p is
d~veloplng a family spen<ling plan bas·
etl on these wants. This pla.1 should be
worked out by the family together so
that all fam11y members are satisfied
with it. It should be custom tailored to
the specific needs of this particular
family.
In some cases you may bnt, to take
a guess at what you think you mJght
spend. then change your plan If &pen. din& records show your estimates are ,._ ________________________ ._ ____ ...,...__;._ _____ J
way ou! of line.
The answ•'r is m a n a g e m e n t •
"'amllies who take a businesslike ap,
proecb to handling their money·
generally get more satisfaction from
their spending than the families who
The moct challenging (and 11===================~===================:. frustratine) part of developing a spen-
"drift and spend."
A family actually is a miniature
business. And "family economists''
need to use the same management
techDlques that businessmen use.
Management can be defined very
simply u, "letting w.bat you wan& •
with what you've 1ot through wise
deciJloDJ,"
In other wordJ. as managers we
must make choices between alterna·
tive ways of ualn& what we've got -
our rMOUrca ol money. time. ener·
gy, abllltla, equipment. etc. -in or·
der to acbleve what we want -our
goall.
Thi st.i» ia management follow
loglcaJb' IJ'om this definition.
Fint we must establish goals -know wbat we wmrt. Then we must de-
velop 1 plm for reaching our goals.
Third we must carry out the plan. And
It involves deciding la advance how
money should be spent. Some people
call this a budget, which it really is.
But the word budget otten scares peo·
pie. They think ol a budget as rigid
and restrictive -a forced conforming
to what someone elae tells them they
i:hould spend.
But actually the ~se o( a budget
is not to kt!ep us fr .>m spending for the
thir gs we want, but rather to plan for
distributing our incom e in a wa y that
gives us the utmost satisfaction from
our spending.
A spending plan or budget needs to
be realistic -bued on the family's
real way of Ufe -and also rtexible so
that it will m changing needs.
Developing a spending plan involves
three steps: I. knowing your income:
2. Jmrywjng your expenses. and 3. set·
HUNT NO FURTHER!
ding plan Is to get income and ex·
iienses to balance. Most families have
too many wants and not enough
money. So some trimming has to be
done here and there to bring planned
expenses into tine with lncome.
This ls why planning is tmportant..It
helps yoc face reality -see what you
can really do with what you've got.
A spending plan also w1ll help you
save money, if saving is part of your
plan. And It helps you look-w.ad to
big. lhtrequent expenses and set aside
r.;oney for them. It helps you stretch
yc.ur money to the end ol the montb
and allot money fairly among your
many speodlng categories.
In other words. by distributing your
.ncome among your many wants -
your spending plan will help you ~et
more satisfaction from your speftding.
And all this is easy and fun to do.
The dl!ficult part is the doin& -car-
rying out your plan. We will discuss
this and methods of evaluation in our
next article.
JOSEPH MAGNIN
AFTER EASTER SAVINGS
FAMOUS·MAKER BRAS REGULARLY •.oo ro s.so 1.99 to 2.99
FAMOUS-MAKER PANTIEGIRDLES REGULARLY &.oo ro 10.00 3.99 to 6.99
SPECIAL!
CHEMISE SLIPS 6.00 TO 9.00 VAtUES 3.99
PETTIPANTS & HALF-SUPS s.oo To 6.oo vAJ..uES 2.49 to 2.99
BIKINI BRIEFS 2.00 To 3.oo VALUES 100to1.69
PURSE ACCESSORIES 1/2 OFF
JISUI •••••• SOITI CIAST PUZA. HISTIL AT TH SAi llEH flHWAT, conA ll fSA.
... llCID\Y, TIUISDAY AND FRIDAY 10:00 TO 9:l1, TUESDAY, WEDN£SOAY AND SATURDAY UHTIL 6:00.
- -= -----_
----------
sterling silver
the fife that brin&a
d li/etitM of joy
TradiUoe • • . rtclt
heavywelpt-q\la.llt1
.tube
Sears
SALE
PRICED
FOR
LIMITED
TIME
ONLY!
'.
CHOOSE FROM 3 EX QUISJTB PA TfERNS
SA YE $37 to ~
\&-~ Mrvtcl for '
P.mbrooke •.. recutar 1138
Teramo •..••. rtlf\llar S1'4
ltl'()mley ••••.• re,War 11112
SALE $99
SAVE ,78 to .106 st-,_.._..., ••
l'tmbrook• ... resuJa.r tl'12
Ttramo ...... Nf\llar 1181
Brt>mJey , •.••• ffC\1111' a804
SALE $199
SA VB •t09 to $1&'7
.. ........... u
Ptelbrookl •.• resuJa.r ...
'l'ervno .\,., .replar HU
Bromley ...••. l'Wf\ll&r •~
SALE $299
Now at Sesra, the heavyweight quality sterHng every woman haa lonied
for ... three m.auificent patterns, all al fanlaatic sale pricul Cbooae
time--honored pudeur of Bromley; ,racelul elepnee of PmbrooJte; mod-
tnl simplicity of Teramo for mothen, brides, yourself.
,-----------... /; I AIL RCUDS L&4D TO ~SOOl'BERN C4UFORNT.4 S'ltJRF:S ..,S:::~ , _______________ .._ ___________________ L ... ..a .......
_ . ........._ ____________ _
•
•
I
I
I
I
I
I
I.
f I -..-
'. HoroJCOf"
OAILY PILOT J 1
Column Replaces Aromas .-
•
Pisces: Follow ~ift Eyes, Not Lids •
Your -Hunches "'A.aide from Sovt, money, wnn, a naUve Callfornian, has hosted her own woman·
'&axes, riots, teen ... gers. war learned much about her 1ut>-oriented radio show. After
and politics some of tile's Ject in Italy. returnlng to New York from
prob1ems are culinary.'' "Durln1 my fOl.U" years ln Italy abe embarked on her TUESDAY, GENE R AL TEN-So begins a new column to Italy my lntereet 1n cooking own rmlll business project APRfl 16 DENCJES: Cycie high for appear every Wednesday in really flowered , lnspired by , in 1 S A G I T T A R l U S, the DAILY PILOT by Nancy the marvelous cu I I l n e • . my m In s c u I e
BY SYIJNEY OMAN\ CAPRICORN, AQUARIUS. Mcintyre of South Laguna. fuclnatlng open market brownstone kitchen" male· ••nie wise man controls Special word t o LIBR.~: ''Wbat Cooks Is here to plec~s. and a maid to wash inc and marketing an Italian
t'a dettlny ... Astrotosy nellbbor or relative has help you with those culinary the dJ.Jhes." quips the col· green sa~ called Salsa
polnta the way." something of import.a.nee to quandartu -whether it's umniat. mother of a ~en· ~l'de.
s\ate -lliten. planb.lng a dlnoer for your 11e daughter. "Since the sauce was too .
ELECTROLYSIS
•fll~lenl heir ru1e•el
•• v1t th• Dul.ec1ltw
flectro·~ltn4 111etho,,
,hont for Co111pll.
1111nhry c.n,vlt•llo~.
luuly Stuilit
ARIES <March 2l·April .. ~~o 11~ out "*~' ~~ son's g11n1 or feeding 38 peo. Mrs. Mclnt~f who was expensive to market at a
19): Gain lbown from writ· =-.1 • !,;~~~ on;: ple on a 3e foot yacht.'' con· educated at U\;LA , bas been popular price. I regreUulJy
teo w-0rd. Study features in ~,:t1 w.a tL ,.,cc;., -H. COLUMNIST tinues the introduction. a publicity director for a bad to abandon this pro-~===============~=~-
your paper. Youare ahletoL_,...;1~-~~~-t_tftlr __ •_51_•1 __ ·_"~ __ ·v __ °"'·_H._v. ____ ~N~a~nc~y:......Mc..:.:..:.ln~ty..:......r•.:.._ ____ _:_T~be~1~u~tho....:.::.r~o~ftbe~-fu-od __ co_1_. __ Loo __ d_on __ co_s_m_•_U_c_£_rr_m~,-•_n_d_:,jec __ t._" ______________________________________________ ~~--
· Hewporhl Fashlm Island Newport Center• 644-2200
peree1ve future n e e d s. ,-
Permit creative imagination
to soar. Rise above the
crowd. A~ent foresight.
TAURUS <April 20 ·May
20): HlghU~t independence
of thought, act.ion. Take in·
itiative. Money p r o b I e m
solved if you are a self.
starter. Mate, partner may
be well-meaning but could
lack confidence.
GEMINI CMay 21-June
20): Cement alliances. Don't
take others for granted. Ac·
cent on m a r r i age,
partnerships, public rela·
tions. Some circumstances
may present obstacles -
but this is ~mporary. Stick
to guns.
CANCER (June 21-Juty
22): Get dow n to work on
basic issues, p r o b le m s .
Some ol your associates e"·
ten<i hand of friendsl\ip. Ac·
cept. Clear away petty
jealousy, problems. This is
done by spirit of coopira·
ti on.
LEO (July 23-Au~. 22 l: Be
aware of details. You may
be tempted to m<>ve too fast.
Caution could be your ally.
Romantic interests are ac-
cented. Permit logic to have
a say. Ottierwise, there
<:<>old be regret.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22):
Resttess?M!5S ind1cated rlose
to home bue. If you have
complaint. talk about it -
bu t avoid tendency to aag or
whine. FortbriJ!bt manner
wins Ule day. Realize this.
Act accordingly.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22);
More than one d e s I r e ,
decision occupies spotlight.
Necessary to be
discriminalin~ -C'hoo11e tbe
best. A v o i d Impatience.
TakP svecial care ln traffic.
Be specific. Relative com-
municates.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21 l · Prorit indleat~ if you
are shrewd in buying, sell·
ing. Lunar empbasls on
money, possessions. Key Is
proper organization. D o
some personal investigatinc.
Find out wliy.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Per90nll deallnga
favored. People relate to
you. Your effort. prove sue·
cessful if you take klitiatlve.
Don't depend on others -
lead the way. Older in·
dtvidual becomes aHy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19): Accent on
separating fad from 11·
lusion . Particic>atlon l n
special study-lecture group
proves berielicial. Fine for
putting finishing touches on
format, unique presentation.
AQUARfUS (Jan. 20-feb.
18): Chance to imprcve
revenue from occupali.')f] is
spotlighted. Empb&Si~ .on
contacts, news r e c e I v e d
from frlenda . ~ willing to
try something new. Don I be
blocked by tradition.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20): Follow through on
hunch C0011ected w I t h
career advancement. You
gain by teaching. Others ap·
preciate your efforts today.
Don't keep ablllties a secret
-display them.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are a go-
getter. 1nterfft.ed in science
and history. 'J'ihls could be a
most slg:n1tlcant y e a r ,
leading to crelter recogni·
lion. If aingle, marriage
could be oa hori.zoa. Promo-
tion. grulet responaibili ty Is shown, a1ooC wih ,realer
reward.
Court Stella
Members of Court Stella
Maril 1441, C a t b o 11 c
Daugbwa of America meet
each Mecmd and fol.U"tb
Mondar at a p.m. In St.
JQlcldm'• pariah ball, Cotta !wteaa. •
seilli-ann ual SAbE
Sears • proportioned-fit nylons
CHARGE IT
on Sein
Revolvin1 Ch111e
CLING-ALON•
Nylons
Ar. advertiBed in
Ladies' Home Journal,
McCall's and other
leading women'•
magazines
'.:. f
·/
" .. ·
YOUR CHOICE OF:
e CLING-ALON~· stretch nylon1, regular kn it (nude h~el)
e CLING-ALONIS* stre tch nylons, mesh knit (with heel)
e AGILON* 1tretch nylons (nude heel)
e REGULAR KNIT (nude heel)
•y 1m by DuPont
Seara Selle Only Firat Quality Hosiery
. ..
SAVE Soc Pair
Regular •I.49
c
• pair
Cl•111ic Sh•p.ly Petite
8\t to II 8\ll lo 11 8 Lo 10~
Proportioned to fit in both length and width.
(:on toured at thigh, knee, calf, ankle and foot.
Jn sizes that fit any legs, all legs, your legs!
Spring fashion shades!
••• No Seconds, No Irregulan
'nwth• al Mut .. 0 1y of Orup
637-2100
. .
NO CAUSE 'OR HEADACHE -Mrs. George
Doubledee, general chairman of St. John the Baptist
Catholic School Auxillary's fashion show and lunch·
eon, is refusing a giant aspirin and ice bag guaran-
teed to cure any headaches which might be caused
with so great an undertaking. Mrs. Ooubledee as-
s\ires the Rev. Anthony McGowan and Mrs. Robert
Reid, vice president, that her committees are work·
ing efficiently and it has been rewarding to work
on this seventh annual event. The benefit is set for
April 20, in the Grand Hotel, Anaheim.
-.. . . ' . --..
Fashions a la Carle
Women Cater to Style
Providing tile decorative Purdy, Fraaeea Co• to 1 ,
Htting for the .. vent!l an-George Newland, ~
nual fashion abow a n d Steen, Duane DevincelW
luncheon of St. John the md Miii Janet Cejb.
Baptl.at CathoUc School Aux· Ted MeilenbelJlw' and his
iUary will be the Madrid atrolllnc muaid.anl will pro-
Room ol the Grand Hotel, vide the mule.
Anaheim. Accordlnt to Mn. Vidor
A social hour at 11:30 a.m. Clarke, president, a vast
will precede tile 1 2 : 3 0 asaortment ol door prizes
bmcbeon Saturday, Aprll 20. will be offered, and pro-
Mon than 700 iuesta are ceedt c-e earmarked for the
expected .t the event en· school
and the Sisten of Me.rey.
Otber obairJDeA MrVillC
for tbe allw are the MIQea.
Thomu StelJner, ticket.a;
Dennis Walz and Frank
Kreitler, ralfle; Robert
Torbet and James Burnett.
door priz.es; J oeepb Par·
rino, art effects; Raymond
Martin, table favors, and
George Cejka, publicity.
Also lending a bmd are
Mrs. Donald Maddock,
advertiai.ng, Mrs. C 1 a r k ,
decorations and Robert Bon·
nlng, program.
Pinching Fruit 1
May Soon Be
Out of Date
Pinch1ng perishable f.ndts
and nptable• to aee JI
they're rlpe soon may be out
of date.
Tbe callfomia Depart.
ment of Agriculture tw •
developed a aensithed
sticker for avocado• that
changes from purple to
bright yellow as the fruit
ripens. Gaseous emiuJom
cause the color change?
reports the U.S. Departmeni
of Agriculture.
The degree of c o 1 o r
change alsc> tells consmnen
about time needed for the
fruit to reach full ripeness.
titled Fashions a la carte. Honored gue!lts wlB be the
Members and friends will be Revs. Anthony McGowan,
served at circular and rec· Mark Stehly. Kennet b
taniular tables, with gaily Krf U:Se and Jude Momeltb,
striped and flower-laden --'----------...------------------
flower carts adornlq the
centers.
Model! from tbe parish
members will cater a
fubion menu ol h1gb style.
Directing them will be Mrs.
Ol.arles Mec:Dtroth a n d
Mra. John stone, who also
wlll serve as commentator
for her third year.
Walking down the ramp ln
the latest of fuh.IOOI will be
the Mmes. George Pakner,
Georce Carlyle, G e o r g e
Jobmoa, Terrence Clark.
Willlam Mueller, Roger Gib-
bona, James CaHab.an, John
Harborites Marry • Mesa Rites '~ th~ fut1'rt •••
Toda11t"
e S.crehrit l
Tiie
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
County
Music!
RADIO KOCM
103.1 FM
C o a t a M es a Fl r s t •••'·.it Methodlst Cllurcb was tM
setting for the v" and ring exoh~ of Judith Kathleen
Cornwell and Jchn Dodge
Wyatt Ill. Performing the
ceremony was the Rev.
Herbert Johnson.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Max T. Cornwell
of Costa Mesa, wu given in
marriage by her fatber. She
wore a foll length gown of
chanUlly lace. A fabric bow
caught her mantilla style
veil wbich fl<1'1Ved Into a
train. and she carried white
chrysantbemume, centered
by a while orchid.
Wearlllg spring green
frocb with pink trim and carrying pink roeea were
'Ka.Nn Jean Cornwell, maid
of honor; Kathie 7.entgraf.
Mra. AllMtlte Ham and
Phyllls Freeman,
bridesmaids, and Kayla Ann
eonwtell, Junior bridesmaid.
1'\e bridegroom, ton of
Mn. J<ibn Dodge Wyatt of
Newport Beach, asked
Elwood Hathaway to be h1I
best man. Guests were
ushered to tibelr seats by
Tom C o r n w e 11 • Tony
Andenon, Val Fadely, Hal
Foreman and Stan BeMon.
Jeff Cornwell was the ring
bearer. and Mel'ilee Bennett
was &0loist.
Cil'culaling the gue9t boolt
during the reception fn tbe
home of the lnde's parents was Patti Torrey •on.
Afterward the Mwlyweds 1
left on a honeymoon to
Idyllwild.
The bride attended the untv~lty of utah and
California State College at
Long Beach where 9be af.
fillated wttti Alpb.a Omicron
Pl. Her bU&band is a
graduate ol. the Army-Navy
Academy. Oceanside. at·
teoded Pasadem C l t y
College and will graduate in
June from UCLA.
MRS. JOHN D. WYATT Ill
lcfyllwllcl Honeymoon
SPECIAL!
I •A•RIC YALUIS I
sanforized 100% cotton
DENIM
COORDINATES
• CHECKS • STllPES • PLAIDS
SOUD COLORS
hHvy duty sports i nd play fabf'ic
l6" wide 9uar. washable
IM. 6tc te 7'c y.t. VALUIS
YARDS
HUNTIN&TON IEACH
IDf,_.A AT llAQ-f
HUHTIN.-rOH HACH ", ... ,,
SOUTH COAST PlAZA
HJSTCX AT SAN DfMO
FWT,. COSTA MlSA
141·1M•
School of BusillSS ~ v~
ABC SHORTHAND
e MMicel
lnwruc•
FROM FASHION ISLAND. NEWPORT BEACH ~
El Rancho continues to bring you foods
of America ••. and this week it's
"take me out to the ball game!"
with the fun foods that go with it!
Peanuts ....................................... 29L.
In the ahella ••. the fun food ••• anytime, anyplace!
Popcorn ............................. 3 tor ·Sl 00
Ready to Eat! ... big 2 gallon bag! Take some a long !
Cracker Jack .................. 3 tor 25c
Re,ular size packar es ! Part of bueball'a lonr tradition I
Hot Dogs .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . . . 53~
'What would a ball rrunt be without hot dop? Hormel!
· Buns or Rolls ................. 3 tor s1 oo
Ham.burrer style or Wiener bun.a ••• pq. of 8. Weber's r
'81Jrqer Meat ........................... 69L
Ground round I I.an ... truh ••• for better burrerat . ·.
Mustard ..................................... 15•
French's .•. 9 oc. Jar ... alJ the ~P It should have
Pickle Relish .................. 4 "' s1 80
HeinJ ••. Bambwpr, Hot Oor1 hdia, Sweet •.• 11 OI.
NEW RECIPES ••• yovra /O'f the
taking at our meat eounte.,-, Feoi.ur-
ing, tki~ week -dtligktful dmin~
u;ith bud.get JMatll
Se"e them 1 beuty heel dinner before they go to the pmef
B • •. R.b 39'1 ra1s1ng 1 s....................... •
So m~ch ~ea~ ~n these! Be sun to pt our recipe for braised
beef r1ba J&rd1n1ere -your folka will appreciate itr
Noodles .............................. 1.u. ~ J3e
Globe A·l ... wide or medium ••. ~rvt with brailtd beM ribd
Fresh Ca1rots .................... 2 1or 19-
G•rden roodneaa, packapd to preserve quality I 1 lb. pq..
I Prit:u iK e/f ed Ill all •tM'u
JIOJ&., Tu.u., Wtd., A,,,;l 15, 16, 11
\
-he ... Oft, .. a ts D dnt? a m .~::,.•at a 'tr mmn a tr
MUSICAL TOUR -Nancy Sinatra, above, stan in a ·
fast paced musical tour of California at 9 p.m. to-""-ll~E-,.;..;:t,._
night cm Channel 4 in color. Dean Martin, Frank
Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr. are featured in tbe
hourabow.
TELEVISION VllJWI
TV Returns
To 'Normal'
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -In the wake of the r1tre11
and preempted programs· of recent days, network
television settled back to something like normal
over the weekend.
THERI WAS nothing extraordinary going OD,
and it was sort of reluing. Contributing to the
"business as usual" look was another of those teen-
age beauty conte1ts on ABC Saturday nig.bt. There
were all the reruns, of course. And there was base-
ball and on CBS the Masters Golf Tournament.
NBC'• Telephone Hour Sunday was primarily
devoted to fine solo and choral singing by the choir
of the famous Bach featival of Bethlehem, Pa. There
was some attempt to jt{ve the early evening bpur
the form of a documenlary but just enough to pro-
vide a peg fo.r the music.
"PBL," the educational network'• Sunday ev&-
ning program, managed to touch some sore spotl by
scheduling, on the eve of tll• income tax deadline, a. short feature on tax loopholes not available to
the vast majority of citizens.
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy presented IOllle statis-
tics about loop~lea -one man worth more than
a billion dollars wbo p.14 less than '700 in tuea
two years in a row; 85 pttnom with annua) incomes
of more than $500,000 wlio paid DO ~ at all.
AND THEN, to the jM&Dty ltrabll el ·~.Work
U You Can Get It," tM program dlmamtrated the
way the laws about capltal galm, oil depletion al-
lowances, municipal bond• and even joint returnl
by husbands and wive• can chop down tbe debt of
some lucky taxpayers.
No television reviewer can ever become a reg-
ular viewer of any one television seriu, so it bu
to be by chance that alm01t every time this writer
tunes in on "Bonanta" it seems to be Dan Blocker'• night to be the ptitldpal star of me show, and al·
most every time Hoss ii having woman troubles.
SNDAY NIGH1'S show wa1 a sudsy affair, with
Boss busily meddling in a family aitnation and
straightening out the bent if not broken relation·
ship of a man and his wile and children. The man,
it seems, bad withdrawn to whisky and brooding.
after the death of an older son in an accident.
The amazing Julie Barris. who is as likely to
turn up in ''Tarzan" of a Western as in "VicCoria
Regina" or Florence Nightingale in a drama spec·
iaJ, was the lonely, negfected wife.
HOSS WASN'T really in love wi~ her -gosh,
no -but he was a genUe, understanding giant who
brillianUy got the husband to quit belting booze and
back to bis family by the simple expedient of having
a fiat fight with him.
It was an interestina way to attack the problem,
but one must remember there was practically nothing in the story to indicate that it was really a
Western. The fight put the show back in its proper
category.
CIS WILL devote itl Tuesday night news hour
to a report of the recent visit of ib correspondent,
Charles Collingwood, to Hanoi.
JUDGE PARKIR
TUMBLEWEEDS
Mun AND JEFF
\ I
-.. ·-·. ----------· . .. -
't ':ti==-· ...... ..u1~ .. L--~ ... ,. .. ·~~~
,.~··.
ly Harolcl L. Doux .. -
ly Tom K. Ryan
I F'tEDGE 1'l.1..EGIANCE
10°™E Fl.AG Cf THE . UNITED ~TES OF·
YOU twON,
50WI
PWOP\.e
A"~ u ice 1').(AT. ..
~ERICA! Ni TO ...
ly Al Smith
M°'*Y, .,...., 15, 1968
MONDAY
APRIL JS
I I/ f 1'... • •, I,
,,.~c:=' ._. • (IO)
• , ""' (30) m I '-lAlq (Ill) m tllllptt'• , ... ~ (30)
Ill w~.,.. 11 it.i. <C> ....... , ....
7:118111 ())...... (C) (In
lrlf .. ,.m.,. Joftltlllll eoi..
wtlOll ~ retvm ID Dodi'
City tD fln4 "'' """ wtlo lllot thtl r father Ill tM beck It flt Lone lrlnch S.lootl 12 yttfl ~
fort. Evidence *"'"' ID JO!nt to
lhtt Diiion. Ind Amoa Colt dial·
ltnllt lt!t llllf111tl to I aheot·OUl
(R)
D Tiit M"'._: (C) (30} "Mon·
Mi• Moor." Mike decldn to "'" tor public office to *" the comJl!I 1dmlniatratioft flOlll turln1 down
their bolrdln1 hou•. (R)
I) ..... v.,q.: (Cl (30) 'Tht
Col!lplttt Parft."
8 11'1 m cmmc n. u.-. * Wiril°" ~ Cem•: (C) (SO) "St11dt Ill tht Dttp." This
pn)IJllll fMtum th• llf• cycll of
the lll't * turtles end 1 look II
............
m JACK LATHAM With * Late News/Str1lcht NfWI
Weeknl&htl In Color
m Ject L11Mm ..... <C> <.,, m ..... v..-. tc> (30) .,, ... , ....
th• MWISt additions to Captain 10:30 m .... (C) (30) l nl .1011111.
Couste1u'a flttt, I l)llr of ont·lllln fm Whit's ltaellMS. llf. """
submll'ln• .. Lt l'uca--the Flat-"81114Uat of Lift." Oevld Sllwf It·
tht n1mt llWll ·to tht 11• mini· lands 1 coe~ll · perty ind dlnMI' MJba. wllf bt ... n ulldtrlolni tat ,_ dlvu oft Euro,e. Thi ""' undtr· that deientfltts Into 1 p~throw-
water wllicles '"" dmloptd to Ina contelt.
provide lt!t 111tn wltll 1 wider Yltw
of tilt ltCfl!I of tll• oce1111. 11:00 8 ar-O'a.ct ltlpttt (C) (30)
B MltliN S .... : (C) "lli•11 Jtnr Dlmphy . Teiit_.. (musicll) '5&-T1b Hunt· 11 T1lt lltll l4-"-: (C) f30)
er. 6"" Vinion. ltq W1lst011. 6tor11 ~nntr.
m Tl'llll " Cllftt1111t11c:t1 (C) (30) 11 s,..t.Jll: "'Cfy If Ille ..........
t!) '9ny M-(60) {li01TOr) '44-Step/ltll Cnne.
m Tiit Fn!lcl cw D """= (C) CSOl 1uttr w.,...
A .... :"1'11eltlldstf ..... II> C..leM ' C.llCioMI iii" (dr1m1) •sg -Dt111t Beller,
l:OO II....._ l Mrit ~11: ('C)
(60) KIY' llllud end Jolln Byntr
ma kt "'*' 11Jt1t eppu ran ca.
11,...: (C) "l'1lt """" nu. iirbelt" (comedy) ·~ulty Hol·
lowfY, Georr• Relph.
• ,._,., (C) (30)
fl) Oltlf, U. Arthlttd C. M.
Ousy rnodtrat• 1 dfaculliofl ind .,.p111c look It tfle dewfollm•nt of
our cltJ. Oo1111nt11tln1 on tllt future
ICOllOllllc NM of tl!t city It Con·
11d Jtlll89011, blnlltr 1rld tCOllOmbt.
Tom 8en. D1Yld Opill.shu.
m • ,,.. (C) (SO)
II Adlel n.tra: "Lna•ltl Ltdf' (muac.I) '47 -fr1ncls L
SulllYln. Anne Ztirter.
11 :JO IJ Mewla: '1t lldl Mia °""" (drame) '46-Ollvla de Hnllland,
John Lund.
0 Qt CJ) Tiit Tlllllllt ... ~
D Im CJ) .Iott ~ .. (Q
mt• Cmlt """ ce>
eE U.,,. ... 12:10at1Wtt4 Cltr
1:JO e a rn Tiit lM7 111or. IC> <30> m Mtvlt: .. ,,... IMrlff" CWU1er11)
Lucy 11 1lrnost buten ollt In a -Sttrllnc Hayden. Cotlsttnct Fri
women's PoOI tournamant by 1 ~
hU1lltr in dill\llM. Olclt Shawn I U:.45 fJ .,_.: "lilall*" (tcMnturt)
IUtSb.. (R) '£-Jcllft ll'Olllfltld, Lon Cllwy, IJ Im CJ) ltlt hlnl: (C) (30) Victor )Ory. ,.in.. UNi· Thint·Elltll!J lllld." The
lttb wound 1 Gll!Mn 11u111 dur1nt
111 attack on tn tMf!IY O/lfM1J, trld 1:00 9 Mftlt: ,,_ Tt Mmtt • ..
llMt Mtk lmmtdlatt llltdlul 11d Uncle" (comedy) ·~111 .. Co-
fer htf. SUMll/ll Crlmtr patL (R) burn, Wendy Hllltr.
m Mm trtftlR (C) (90) a "Son of Frankenstein"
• Wel1' " WMltll (C) (30) fJ!l USA "9ltrJ: A profllt of Robtlt * Boris Karloff-Btll lup
l!itetey. Ht daetlbtt how Mt
potlM art wntte-in sllolt lllu·
111h11tln1 bvllts "' tllouPf.
TUE S DA Y
DAYTIME MOVIES
0!1¥11 de Hftllltnd, Mitt StMnt. 11•. "'Wrhl ....... (...tint)
·~111 Edwards. "T1ll ~ tf
...... Crll9" (IMl!tvrt) '51 -c-.. ..,,,.,,,
U:.M ....... " WW' (drt!M) ...
1:118 (Q ......... .,..... (... -IJeMor hltilr, 81& Y0411f,
Wfttln) '51-S..11 0.-,. v.. 4:JO. tel. ..... ... • """'
....... (f-.> .. -"""" ... Jee*
, .......... flll" <"'-> I ltmNft.
SBVINCI THI
Public and Tracie
COMPLETE
PRINTING SE~VICE
... ,,,,,,,, 642-4321
2211 w ........ aw.
• t {
~ower Challenge
Only 3 Boats
Comp"lete Race
Seven olfsbore p o w e r
be~ rwred a<Way from ~
s: Dtiing UM irl California
Yacbt Club'& Cat al in a
Challeoge race Saturday.
Twenty minutes 1 a t e r
there were only three boats
left in ttle race.
First ol the big power
plants to succumb to the
bone·shatWring speed in
choppy seas was J a c k
LF.GAL NOTICE
IN THI SUP llttOlt COUllT
0' TMI STATI OP
CAL.,O•NtA IN ANO '011
TMI COUNTY 0' OUIMI ..._AD Ute
CITATIOtt
lft Ille Matttr tJI Ille AdoPll,.. of
VIRGINIA DUMPHY. t ml-
THI! PEOPLE Of' THIE $'T.ATI Of'
C,.LIFOltNIA·
to .JAMEi "· DUMPHY 9Y ttder of llllt Court YO<I ere .......
(119d ..... ,_,,,.., " -· .,..,. "'9 Jlldt• of "'" Covrl lft Ille Court House lft fl>o t:'ll/f!IY of Ora ..... Slate of Callfor"le•
.. .,,. '-' ·-ol Ow••-' No.. •n T~vrMl•Y tflf JS"' deY ol Jvly, I ... , a l
f I\ o•cfl'•\ AM of 111•1 d••· .,.... tlwl
,....,, 1~ -"ow uiu~. ii anY lfllv MYt lll•I
I'·• .. :111,,,. l'f THOM•i MONROE WIG-
r.1,.< "'' 1M WPllon of VIRGINIA
0 •1••D1iY, •"''"°'-Id not be tra"ted r · • ..., under "'y Nnd tnd t*al of tho
St ·•rlrr Court of ttw COUlllV of Orenoe.
Sl•tt ot Calltor"'•· IN• 1111• d•V ol t,p•ll, ,,..
W E, ST JOHN
CounlY Cltrfl •NI CIH•
Ot 1119 SUPtrlor Court Ot 11M1 Slate ol Ct lltor"ff
I" end tor IM
Counlv of Oranet
ISEAL ~UPERIO• COURT
ORANGE COUNTY) 9Y WILMA WHITE
~
eltlSMAM I CAWYI• A-Y fW Pelfl._t , ... ,,.,.. ... TnMf ...... .. nt IMf O<MA ...,..., ... .
L-... ell. C.'""'1<1• _,
T.._..... *· (1111 m-1m l'ubllslled Or•no• CMll D1llY Piiot,
'4-rll u. ;~;,~~ ~~;~ u..-
1 teOTICI O' INTINTION TO
TllANSPH IN IULIC AT
,.U9LIC AUCTION
Not!« h t.er~IW •I"*" le IN C ......... 111 MarWll o Hot!lund. Tr.,..i.ror.
-blltlllftO -6C!rat It 109' "-' 81vd., CMI& Mtae. Count\' 111 Oranet.
$1•1~ "' ~"'°'"'a S.ld pr-Iv It dncrlM'il In tMMral
e1. C°"'trl/dk'ft E4K1i• • trlK•t. toolt, •I< ol !NI Mtrlllt Constrv<tllf'I llullMft
k"""" H ftlt DulfV C.,,..oa"y •nd localed
t i 10J' Newoorl 81\ld., C~IA MtU• Co..n-
IY nl Oonoe. $tale of Calllornlo,
Avcllon wlll be crndU<lfd IW Pllll Ha..-. AllcffONer. II" IM 17111 o.v ol
Atrll. IMll al OM o'tloc\ , .M al 2051
, Nt-0'! Blvd , c .. 11 "'*"• COU"lv ol
·O••no•• St•te !ff C~lll(lrnla
Ti,. 'Tffmt of '"" Salt will be tor t.stl So fer H known to ftle Al>Cllt ""'· 111
....,MU Nmtt and -rn'" uHd IW tM Tr•ntleror 10r IM tlirM y .. rl fut DHI, II
dlllerent from •-· .,,. nont
""" •I'd all cl1lm• of wflat-ver "81ure ere to be IH'-Ned to IM tlCtOW dtPUI·
-n! ot Phll Han-and """''""" on or bf'fore l!Y ~ deY ol AD<ll. INI el 1J
•'<tocll -· •7'\ Wttl tltll, S.nl• Ana. CounlY 111 Oranoe. Stall ol cantor"'•·
Daltd Mrll J2tll. tffl. Pl'lll Hanton
Aucttor-ff• Pui.t,.,,.., Dnne• CO.ti Ooltv Pll<li. ""'" ''· '"' •n.., -LEGAL N011fE
p.Jfnl ... ~,
ClltTIPICATI 01' IUSINI SI
'1ctttl•t '1rrn N•,... THI! UND IEUIGfflED dO l!Htby c.erHtv
NI ftley are concluc!IM .t "'11'l41'Y
DUtlnetl et tal1 Orl .. nta Drlvt.
Minion Vlcfo. Calltornla, undt• Ill• lie· tlllout tlrtn .,.,... of MISSION \lllEJO
GAltDFN CENTER and 11\11 .. Id llrm
., c~ed or ~ 1011,,..lne person\, *""'• ,..,,,_, In 11111 e...S PIK.. of
ttsldence ar. It IOU°""' -tt· lltnlamln eu1tltlo1, .. .,.,.1 parlMr.
"70 Ct"'•"'" Lane. Min ion Vltlo.
Cal.
Errte•I P 9ordler. Jr .. llmlled ""''· ner, .. , Pr.,.PKI SI • H....-llHC/I,
Cal Werrier P B<>rtll.,, llmlle,f .,.,1,..,,
3051 Ctrob St., NtwP<l't lloo<JI. C1I
WITNESS our htndl IMI 5111 deV
OI M<lrtll. IMI. ltnl•mln 8u1tlt1ot.
G-t•I Parfrier ErMlt P. 8 0tdltr. Jr ••
limited Pertn"
Wtrntr P. llordltr Limited Portnet H ATE OF CALIFOllNIA )
Cl'>UNTY OF ORANGE I IS 0 14 THIS s"' da• 111 Marcf'I. AD.
""· before m•. tht unoen1Qr>ell. • Nottrv Publlt lft and for tho u ld ~ovntv '""' Slate. rnldlno ftlertlft. dulv cornmlttl..,... and swom. Mrsonaltv .,..
-red at/Ile min 8u1tlllot, Ernu1 '.
9ordltr. Jr. tlwl WtrMr "· llordler
•MWn lo me to bt lllf .. non• WMH
,..,..., are wbt<rlbtd to "'9 wlftlln ,,..,,_,, end adlnowlodil4'd to IN
11\at ,,..., txt<Uled 1111 same.
IN WITNESS WHEltlEOF. I lloff
~.,.unto wt rnv Nn<I '""' affbtd mv ltlflcltl M•I 1111 dn end vnr In ftllt Ctl'lfflalt flrtt •llOV• wrlffen.
(Of'l"ICIAL 51!ALI
0••14 It ,,,.....
Nofory Public
Slate of Ctlltofnlt PrlntlPll Ofllce In ~ .... Cellflly
My Cornrnl•tkln l aelrts Oct.•· 1m WIT'TMAN • JCMMIDT
AltttntYt et l.tw su1i. nt
tfr•.-orf N•ll-1 l.eflll •• ,.,, Wtttclltt Ortw
N-..,...,.1 a .. tll. C•I. fMM ~ .. ~lh~ed 0 ••"9f Co"' Otllv "ltot. Y. lrth 1J Incl April I, I. 15, I,_ .....
Lf.GA L NOTICE
Jenld.n&' 3'2-f-OOt G o 1 d
Co..ter with tts two 427 cu.
in Cbevy engines. The roar
had hardly died away before
Jenkins radioed tbat lfe WU
oot of tbe race five mioutes
after the start.
Flfleefl minute. later the
single 427 cu. in. Ford In
Dave P u c k e t t • s 01'
Whatserface conked. follow-
ed at short intervals by
David Eyraod's Thunder
(whose single 427 cu. in.
"bk>wn F ord" was ap-
propriately named) and Bob
Nordilrog'a Holocaust.
As the three survivors
oosed into calmer Seal in
mid-d'lamiel it became ap-
parent that it was a small
boat race with Bob Spratte's
13-foot G I a s t r o n The
Trav'ler with three Chrysler
outboards rounding the west
end of Catalina lslood at
10:33 a m. -just 33 minutes
after the start.
l'wo minutes and 3 O
seconds behind Trav'ler We!'
Maury For1ney's 7.enor Zip-
pe Crom Newport Beach.
and 11 mjnutes behind Zenor
Zippe was Otis Chandler of
San Marino in bis 23-foot
Thunderbird Form u I a
powered by a 427-cu. in.
Chevy.
And that's the way they
flnjshed. For some unex·
plained reason. Zenor Zippe
was never reported around
the ea&t end of Catalina.
Fortnay. incident~Jly was
the defender m the race.
winning last year wlth a
smaller version of his cur-
ren( 32·foot orange and
white Bertram.
Trav'ler blasted across
the finish line at 11: 48:20
for an elapsed lime of one
hour <:nd 11 minutes for the
101 mlle circuit. She averag-
l!d 56.6 miles per hour.
S:.>nor Zippe finished at
12: 13: 10 a n d Chandler's
Seven C's crossed the line at
12:23 :22. The race started
at 10 a.m.
As the overall winner
Trav'ler picked up the
Catalina C h a I I 1! n g e r
Perpetual and the Hal
Roach Perpetual for the
first boat to round the east
end of the island.
Scott Allan
Favored
Scot Allan and a crew of
hot use sailors will be one
of the favorites to capture
the Jo!'" F. K e n n e d y
Memorial Trophy in the an-
nual regatta to be sailed at
the U.S. Naval Academy at
Annapolis, Md. next week·
end.
The USC team had a pre-
race tune-up last weekend
when they sailed Bill Pilly's
37-foot sloop Conq~st to a
fltst pla~ in the ocean rac-
ing division of Long Beach
Yacht Club's Point Fermin
race.
The KeMedy Cup regatta, !Or selected collegiate sail-
mg teams, will be sailed in
41-foot Naval A c a d e m y
Yawls. The winner last year
was Skip AIJan who headed
the Stanford team. Runner-
up was his brother Scott.
Skip Allan this year h.as
been selected as the coach
of the Stanford sailing team
LEGAL NOTICE \
SM1 NOTtCI 0' SALi 0' ltlAL eu Si. PltOf'lltTY 4T ,.lttVATI JALI
NOTICI 0, UUITll'i SALi N•• 11111 P·S.I T,O, .... TS llW1 In "" SUPe•lor Court of ,,,. Stal•
On Y.•• e, 1"61 11 11 ·00 AM , TITLIE Cellloml•, !Or ,,_. Co..ntv o1 LH t,r>o«ltf
INWRAHCIE ANO TltU$T COMPANY, .. 111 lllt Mtlttt 111 ""' &lelt o1 J-
of ..
clvtv -4nl9d 'Trv>~ .,.,.,., and Mclnlos/I, etuo J"ne Hoffman Mclnlelll
INrtu•nf IO ~ of Trv1t dai.d Merell DK'M* .
n. 1"5 ••K11•..i lw GIL91EltT MAlt\llN No"c. ,, ...,.,..,.,, 91Wll "'•' .... .,.,. COVELL •I'd JEANNIE CAROL CO\llELl. denl9Nd wlll NII et Prlvelt \alt, 111 ft1t
"Us .... nd •nd wtie and ~~ ..... u 6. f\1 ..... 1 •nd M l MOWr. wblf<I 10 tOflo
IH$. 111 -1m , H.e .. ._ o1 omctat n,,...11911 ol w ld '-'°' CMl • .,..
ltocon!S Ill -Office ol 11M1 tall"llY ... Ille 1"" ...., 9f M<ll IN&. •I h .... A~ ol Or•"" COU111Y. C..llfornl•. nee 111 ,_ o, •-n•ld JU
.,
WILL SELl AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO ._,., Or •• J4111t 41), a.-°1t Hll
HIOHUT 91DDl!lt ,Olt CASH fNVMtle C0'1ftW f/K lt1 A,...ltt, Sia"°
•• ... ..
,, tlmt of wte In i.w1111 _.. et "" C•lltWlll9. all lllt r1911t, ntte ...., '"*"" United Slaietl In the 1M141Y llf 111t W9f 9f Mid ~ at Ille llfM of -..111 efld
INrklM lofl ~-TTflo ·-·-•" .... rlelll. tllle .... loi.r .. 1 11\el .... l ulldtne loc•1" 1111 llM Nor1'lwftt --•l•le of Mid ~ 1wn -11'9d ...,
ol Ele"ll) .... Malll S,,...... '-"" AM, -•tleft 9f ....... _.,. ·-111tf1 C..lltvrnle, ell rlellt. llflt end lfllernt _,.. or In edlflltell te !!lat of Mid ~
I
........ le aM -llltll .., " V!Wr \eld l"9 lltM ol ~ lft -It •II Ille _. °"" 111 Trwt 111 ,,,. ,._,,., ~ 111 ..,_,., ""'41111111 111 ,... Clty of ~
..
In
"" d tv " C.19 MeM. Ill ... G-'Y ,.,,..... """'· ~ .. Or•-· , .... end ltete ""°1lled .. I Ca'"-"'•• Mrtkll........ '"<•"*' .. Lot >4 llf Tr.ct ,.., '1& tn !!It di¥ ef ...._ i.wlt:
..
Cooll Mfte, • .. , ,,.... ,_...... Ill Tiie -"' ?J II 111 Ille S4M1W1 )U f'I " ._ "· -,. "' ~ "' 111e l1lftClf -1w , .. " et Tiie wu1 m " ol,,.. ~ --"'Mid f.OUftf'F, Ille bet _...." ef ... ~ .... .... -..w .. ""'*· .... ...lllwt _,.,., rll Ille --Qverlw
..
_, « .,.,,..,.... u-or Wiied. ledleoo :16. T...,,.,..e Fl"' Selltt\ lt-
rnardlftf ""'· -·-Of -IE ....... WHI. S.1 .8,.M. ". t. ~ .. I"
..
• pimtr•-.... ., .... ,_llllM ~ ... ~ ..... __, "' llltllwel'
clN I -" Ille """ liKll'M ..., MN ..,._ -""' WOii ,. fl -W o-. "' ''""'· ~ a..a.M. w1111 i.... "" _. .,...... tor ·.........., .,,._, "'-"""' 1e. ,..,, " '" ..... .... --......... " "' ....... I -~· ..,,,__ " ,,,..,, uNtr Ille '" .... (If •" ~ of "" Sol/Ill ,. " ltnM ff Ml4 .,... ti Tfwt, ..... die,_ -' lfl9 &sf -"4111 of ftlt "'"""-' w-fltllltT,...._,fllllt _.., .... ......,.....,.,_
In~~.., ... o.w "lnllt. ""' .. ,....,. ,,.. ............. '"'" •atdld • ... .... 0... IJllWll .... S.I IA ,,.,, .., ,_ ffl e W9Cll w •w11 1111 T._ ...... Qf/11 lft INftll -fl .... ..llW"'4 _,,.., t 11 e 'e I I', .. U~ ...... t11 ..,.,_ ..... ti ..... .........,. _.,.... ,,,,, ............. " ...... Clllll ......... ...._... .., .... ,....... • ,..._ .._.....,_ ffl ... _... W .,,._ " TMI 0...
o..11 ... .,.,_. -.... _, _,... • .. ~ • ... TM -~ fl ...... ., ........ .,....,..._..._.._ ............ --· ...... ' ---......,,. .......... ,.~cMCk. ......... ,.., " .. "" ....... .. ... .......... "' ""1flMI ...... ,,,.,.,., .................................. ...,..,, llftlot .. ""' ~ .. -... ~ -., ......... """' ...., .. """ .... ~ .... ,.... ... r;a;;;r,..,: ... --,, -....... " ..... .... 1.«\'t...,.*!,.,.-.., Wf.'1 ~=.: Mrll. .... Tit\ilr'rn" ... ,.. 1¢. .... fll ....... .... ~ ....,, ~-=== ...
'!' ..... • ....... :: :-..:.-:.=-.... -~Fa °'!f:,,,,, ...... Pf ~-I& i c:: DllW l'ftlt , __________ ..;....;.;.J,_. a. u. :-= •IMf
•
. .
Regatta
Attracts
199 Boats
' NOW
DOUBLE
R.\RBELED
SAVINGS
Oft
~-Mone1a1:• 1 i..r.c.
HJERIT~ Dft!IVR AM:ll eoMPlu"'fY
1""'-' A+ ro-1i.no .,, AlllW M. 9"'4 Co.
lntroduc. The Aft Ntw
FAMILY ~ POLI
llllM'lnl lfl Orlt~..nt~ley OOM~DfCNSIVf.
HOMCOWNE:"S COVUAGC
Md '"""~ AUTOMOllU ltflUIW>tea
,.,, All 'Mlll1 Al1'llll
""1IA l.11# COIT WITH m! IUOQET IJA~CNT
~NOW felt 'MC llOQllf
01 MVIHOI ~~UANO ~~
·CONTACT•
WIGMOll
INI UltANC I
2'ff H.,._ ·aawa. Ceet•,... ~1
.. , _____ _ .. ·_ --------~--
Yo•r Mo .. y
A re You
Active
Investor?
.....
'
. ' ----· -----..-·..---.•_....... ---....-·
+"'
+~ _.,.
.:: •4 ·~ -v. -~ -.. .t~ _, ...
l~ -"' :.: _.
..:·"' re
: " ••
... . , .,.
(,,
Monday's aosing
.,.
'
Prices -Wmplete
•
Thursday, Apl'11 11, 1968 DAILY PILOT U
New York Stock Exchange Lis t
l ' I
I --
'
. -
---.
%4 DAILY PILOT Monda1, Aprll 15, 1968
Quantiti'5 are limited, some arc counter soile d. All sold "as is". Sorry, no C.O.D.'s or returns. No items reserved •••
first shop pers get first choi ce. AJI sales final. Nottcleph one or mail orden filled.
SPORT SEPARATES KNITS WITH A WUNGEWEAR
by California ~akers CROCHET LOOK . CLEARANCE
Reg. $l1-$20 5. 99-8. 99 S2S value. 19. 99 Reg. Sl0-S2S 6. 99-12. 99
-styles by -top California-makers in~tt•-,--11._._1'.'he f.l0~a-r-eF~ook-in-DaeFGJlC-.pety------.;=Lo=n.._an=d shgrt robes. dustea an
skirts and pants to mix or match. Misses ester that washes so easily. Broken si7.e range in many styles and fabriar.
sizes. 14-20, l 2Yz-22Yz.
... __ Miuel' Sportswear, 40-all ~ --~
FAMOUS MAKER
SHIRT SHIFTS
Orlg. $11-$15 6.99
by a famous maker of fine shirts. Choose
from stripes, prints and solids in washable
fabrics in sizes 8 to 16. 14m-• MWel' Sportawear, • -all stores --Ill
CAPRIS IN SOLIDS
AND NOVELTIES
$9-$15 values 6.99
in a wide range ot solid colors and novelty
fabrics at a real value price. Mhael' str.es.
,._.. __ ~· Spoa~ww, '11 -all ltorel --~
FAMOUS MAKER
SOFT BLOUSES
Reg. $5. 3.99
Whipped erea.m-~ polyester or Da-cro~ polyester/cotton blouses in a selection
of whites and pute1a.
··--· BloaMI, Shlrla, ·-all -----
FAMOUS MAKER
JUNIOR DRESSES
Reg. SU to $26. 5. 99-14. 99
Tiu. group of cuual dresses in asaorted co.1-
orw and styles, In 90Hdl. stripes and prints.
S.13.
--· Janlor 8polta ..... rt -all lltoree __ .,
DRESSRS and
PANT DRESSES
FOR YOUNG JUNIORS
$13.$2() values. 4. 99-9. 99
Choose a whole usortment from these
stripes. solids and florals in all the wanted
fabrics. 5-13.
Hi-Deb Shop, u -an stores except wn.im.
MIX-MATCH SKIRTS
AND SWEATERS
To clear! 3. 99-4. 99-6. 99
Famow name separates in prints and solid
colors. Skirt sizes 10 to 16 ... sweater sizes 36-40.
street floor Budget Sportswear, SS -all atorea
BIKINI TRIANGLES
FOR YOUR HAIR
Reg. $1. 69C
White cotton pique trimmed with lace for a
feminine summer effect.
1111 ___ A.c:cessorlee, 4l -all stores ---II
BUDGET DRESS
ASSORTMENT
3.99
Various styles and fabrics to choose from 1n
misseil1 and half sizes. Be early tor best seJec. lion.
--· Budget l>re&Me, 'Z1 -all stores --·
FAMOl TS MAKER
DRESSES
Im-Windsor Wom«n's Dreaes, 82 -all stores ---
MATERNITY CAPRI S
AND TOPS
2.99
Summer cottons to mix and mat ch in bright
and dark colors. Solids and prints In sizes
6 to 16. .. __ Maternity Shop, 68 -all stores __ _
JUNIOR DRESSES
IN PASTELS
Reg. $17. 10.99
Rayon dresses with the look of linen in
spring-fresh pastels. Junior sizes 5 to 13.
.. _Junior World Dresses, M -all stores --
SUMMER DRESSES
FOR JR. PETITES
Reg. $17. 1 9 Rayon dresses with the look of 0 9
linen in turquoise, gold. navy or •
brown. Petite sizes 3-13.
--Junior Petite Dresses, 85 -all 1tor. --
BEAUTIFUL SPRING
MILLINERY
Reg. $9-$11. 6.00
A selection of fabrics, flowers and straws In
whites, pastels, small, large shapes, all won-
derfully flattering.
---• Millinery, 800 -all stores ---•
ASSORTMENT OF
SPRING HATS
Reg. $13-$16. 9.00
Many fabrics in assorted shapes to please
every taste. Many flowers in the group. too.
----• Mill.inery, 800 -all stores ---•
HUMAN HAIR
FASHION FALLS
Reg. $69. 49 ()() •
Fine 100% human hair fans in a choice of
colors, to give yourself a new young look.
Im-Fashion Bair Boutique, 800 -all 1t.orea -~
EARLY SPRING AND
EASTER HATS
Reg. $5-$8. 2. 99-3. 99
Flowers, fabrics. novelties and straws In this
selection of styles you'll enjoy wearing now.
.. ___ Hat Box, 1125 -all stores ----
YOUTH CRAFT
STRETCH STRAP BRA
Reg. $4. 2. 66
A beautifully feminine lace bra in white and
colors, with a comfortable stretch strap. ---•Found1tloos, 19 -all 1lorea ___ _
FORMFIT "Web'' Short
Skirter PANTY
Reg. S8. 3.99
A a~k llttJe penty to wear comfortably \.Ul•
der the shorter skirt&.
---• Foundldom, tt -an -.... ---•
$7 Pram sult.s . . . . . . . . . . .. • • . .. 3.99
$4 Creepers, famous make • • • • .. 1.99
$4 Coveralls . . . . . . . • . . • . . • • . . • • 1.99
$3 Hooded parkas, cotton knit . . . 1. 99
Plw toys . . .. . .. . .. . . . . Y2 Price
._ __ Infant.a' Wear, 42 -all 1tore1 ---
FASHIONETTE
INFANT SEAT
Reg. $5. 2.99
Has CQntQured foam pad and safety belt. The
high style design will rock or let baby sit
Ligh tweight
Infanta' Furniture, 81 -all storea --II
TODDL ER and LITTLE
BOY SUITS
Reg. $5-$12. 2.99-6.99
Short or long pant suits, also short sets in as-
sorted sizes and colors. Sizes 2-4, 3-7. 11111111111111111-Toddlers' Wear, 74 -all at.ores __ _.
GROUP OF GIRLS'
EASTER DRESSES
4-6x, 3.99-5.99
7•12• 4. 99-6. 99
Dressy styles In all summer-light colors.
Many styles and fabrics in the group.
---Girls' Dresses, 47 -all stores ---
GIRLS' WESTERN
J EA NS
3-6x. 1 497
-
14
' 1 99 Reg. $3-3.50. • . •
Real-western styling and wear in these pants!
Navy, looen, beige or faded blue.
---Girls Sportswear. 44 -all storea ---
JR HIGH
. DRESSES
6.99
A good selection of styles to wear now and
all summer Jong. Pastels, whites, colors in
aolids and prints. 6-14. .__._ Jr. High Shop. 46 -all stores __ _.,
· ~~ ~-~Is'.~l~~~·.~~I~~ ~~~~ ~~ 1.59
$3 Girls' sk!epers. print top, solid
bottom, 3-8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • . . 2.19
1.69 Fishnet hose. colors . . . • . . • • 49c
$3 Dresser sets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . 1.99
.. mGirls' Underwear, Accesaorlea, 56 -all ator·esaei1-
COT'IDNS and other
SPRING YARDAGE
2 yds. 1.00
Fantastic assortment includes spring cottons
and other fabrics in a choice of textures colors and prints. '
---· Fabrics, 1-38-67 -all 1lotea ----'
SPRING STYLED
HANO BAGS
Reg. S6-S7 3.99
This new-season group Includes soft Plutica. ~ textured grains and others, many one-o? ·a-kind.
Baodbap, r1 -all at.or.
LEATHFRS
LEATHER IOOKS -
6.99-19.99
EASY-WASHING
SLEEPWEAR
. ,
Reg. ~ 2. 99-3. 99
Gowns and ~ pajamas 1n cottom and
time abift.a induded In ~·group. .... ,,._ Lbtaerie." -wD ....
LONG ULO'ITES
AND SHIFTS
Reg. $7 4.99
A bright auort.ment ot prints in these loung-
ing styles great for at home wear or around
the pool.
Street Floor Lingerie, M -all ltorel
FAMOUS NAME
DRESS SHOES
I Orig. $17-$19. 8. 99
All quality brands bl th.ta group ot dress
shoes in high fashion and basic colon. High,
mid and lower heels included.
Women's Sboel, I -all lt«el
BUSK.EN'S LITTLE
HEEL SLING
Orig. $9. 3.99
A fashionable little criss-cross of a sling in
black patent or black leather, grand for all
your spring and summer outfits ..
Budget Faahioo Shoes, 1.01-all except We8tchelter
YOUNG CROWD~
TENNIS SHOES
Reg. $3·$5. 1.99
Our own brand in these long-wearing teruus
shoes ht a good selection of sizes and colors.
Be early for choice.
Children'• Shoes, 58 -all stores
DELUXE SPORT BIKE
Reg. 47.99 3 9 • 99
Has chrome fenders, handbrake, white walls.
Boys in green, girls in lime. has basket. .
Sporting Goods, ...,
SHORTIE DRAPERIES
8.00 value. 4.99
In lively printed patterns, "Marigold". ~oose
from 4 brilliant shades. 48"x54" .
Draperiea, 10
Frostproof Frigidaire
16.6 Cu. Ft. .Refrigerator
Orig. 298.88, 259 .88
Never defrost with this gleaming white beau-
ty, model FPDl 7TC. Trade-in your old re-
frigerator and save more.
Major AppliaDCe1, ao ===
General Electric 14.6 cu. ft.
Frost Guard Refrigerator
248.88
The ease of no-defrosting ls yours with the
handsome unit in white or decorator copper-
tone, model TBF15DC.
TndMn your old l9fripntar ud aa.e more
Major Appliancea, •
FACIAL SAUNA
BY VALLIANT
13.95 value. 6. 99
It breathea moisture into your akin, new life
into your complexicn s ...... .
earever s eavtest
Aluminum COokware
$S28 Yalu-. 10. 99
~ =Jlta1:':-S ~~: double knits
~66
7.39
&99
Draq mt cuuAt lt;yWs h'lclucW Jn the ... ~ 1 99 3 99 IOJ'tment ot tuhlon and bulc colon. Larae . ~ .00 • -• •
and l!mall llm. Totea and ftC\dlr st;yte. --· n.,,u.. ~ 71-1111 .... __ ...
SHOP 10 A.M. TO 9:30 ,.M. MONDAY THIU SATUIDA~
*W t8IPOIT 10:00 A.M. TO t:IO '.M. MONDAY TMIU FllDAY. SAlUIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
! .. ___ lhndhqs,r1-a11 -.. ---•_, ••Mr .,,u._ ___ _.
NEWPORT .,,........._ ...........
~ .... ,,,,
ANAHBM HUN'TlN&TON EACH
"" .......... M.Aer .................
. ..
.......... " . -" ... ~ .._ .. ., -. --. . .... . .. .-..........~ ---.-~-......-----~·· __ . ........,_ __
Monday, A11tll 15, 1968
8-runet~·surVives Scare; Finally ·Wins Game
DAIL V '11.0T •
BAl.Jl'IMORE-A ..Uer men than ~orge Stuart Brwt.tt ~ bavt ap.
. plied for a room at tbe fmmy farm aner 1<-Ji1 •lot straltbt pitdling
verdictl OVf!lt a SS-oi eigbt moatM m days . • • etpedally when molt Ol
tboee setback.I wet• oi tbe 1.0, i-1. J.2
Variety.
But the Anllb' southpaw rodl out
tbe string ol ai&tllmaret Alld ftna1l.y on
Easter Sunday in Baltbncn be 1"lft a
game, 8-2, wtrlcb C8UMd him to ater
remark "maybe my luCk II cbaQPli."
f.nd perUpa tbt 31·)'.-r'-old whll
WU riC't
HU curn baU waa·uot at lta beat.
Yet two ot Baltimare'a hardest
smubea werit tor foula. lftl1ead of home
ni.m u dley booked any from the
playing" 9"&. into the left field
bie.cber1.
W. maus backed him h.andllomely
with teen fielding and 10 bits -
including Rotrer Repoz' bomer oa the Lint pitch ol the game. He beran to reel discomfort ln the
left 1homder and depeted f.rClllD the
mound after aeven inDlDC•. boktfq a
6-2 le8d.
However,~ t..s to live tbnlu&h
two agoablng minutes 112 the bottom or
the eighth When tt appeared tbe curse
against blm would again aaert ltMll.
The Orioles bad k>aded the bases.
thaJW to the wUdma al reUet hurler
Jack Hamiltan. And ctandlll• at the
plate WU bi& Boog Powell.
He repneeoted the 1YinC run -a
IN THE BACK DOOR -Angel right fielder Jimmy
Hall slides into home while Baltimore catcher Andy
Etchebarren waves for a throw. The Oriole infield
was occupied with chasing down Chuck Hinton be-
tween first and second base and Hall sneaked in
the back door. Angels won, 6-2.
Sagging Celts
Down by 3-1
To Philadelphia
BOSTON I AP) -Coach Alex Han·
num or the 76ers wanted Luke Jackson
out of the game, and even had a
replacement waiting on the sidelines.
But before the move could be made
the big Philadelpbja forward popped in
enough long bombs to wreck the
Boston Celtics.
Singer Tries Tonight
Marshmallow Bats
Sink Dodgers Again
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Claude Os·
t.een of the Los Angeles Dodgers
doesn't know much about astrology.
but he can't help thinking he was born
under the wrong sign.
''I'm always getting into the record
books -but in the wrong way," the
veteran left-hander said Sunday alter
he became the victim of a five-hit, 3-0
pitching masterpiece by P ittsburgh's
Jim Bunning.
The Dodgers are believed to be the
Do<:ger Slnte
Ac>tll IS Do:l91_, "' P111>bur9ll. 7 $1 ICFI (6'1))
since Cy Young to strike out l ,000 or
more batters in each of the two major
leagues.
What worries Osteen and the other
Dodger starters -Don Drysdale and
Bill Singer -i.a that the Dodgers have
scored only one run in their first 35 in-
nings this season.
The teams wind up the two-game
series here tonight when Singer, O·l,
goes against Pittsburgh left-hander
Bob Veale, o.o.
rWI wbicti would re1novt Brunet aa the
pttcber of rtc'Ol'd Jf lt tcOrtd.
Ponll bas averaced %4 home nan.s
per ~ J.n al.x campeigns wtt.h
Baltlmore.
Aid SO fat ht 1968 he WU al.x,for.
nine at the plate, tncludlng tb:ree-for-
four and two RBl'a in Saturdly'1 S-0
win owr the Halos.
Clearly, Powell was capable of spoil-
ing Brwiet's victory bid.
Letty. Clyde Wright WU called in
from the Angtl bullpen to throw
curves by the Oriole giant. And
Bruoet'a fate hung on the el·
fectiveneas of the Tennessee-born
relief~.
The count ran to a pair ol balls and
stntea -the latter corning wbe.n
Powell IWWlg lllt. bad pitch.
Booe ~ wlCh the Wri&ht or.
fering -but there was no danger. It
waa hauled down in right field and the
1n.ning WU over.
Wrigtlt breeud through the ninth
Att9el Slate
(1~11 " Metls •I WH llln ..... 10:30 a.rn. KMPC
Aoril 17 AMt .. vt NN Yri 7:SS It.II\. KMl'C (110)
AP<ll II .Aneels VI New Yottt 7:JI 1t.m . KMPC (710)
... ..," " Alllleb VI l alllmot• 7:» •. m. KMPC (110)
""'" 20 .......-VI l alllrn-. 7:$5 -.m. ICMl'C (7101 11~;u 21 MMll VI 1a111mor• 12:ss .._m. KMPC
Aotll 2' AneelJ 'It Wulll"9IOI\ 7; JS •·"'· KMPC OlOl o~" l) ,.,,.,.,, VI Wu~ 7:U '·"'· KMl"C
with the aid of the 4'Jlgels' third double
play of the a.ftemoon and Brunet could
at last smile.
He had won a game.
His mi5fortunea had begun one
August evening last y.ar when be
absorbed a 1-0 loss at Yankee
Stadium.
Brunet did not with win a game the
rest of that season. and some good·
.n:teanin~ Yolks suggested he might
nghl with the evil spirits by ldssing
the Blarney Stone, parting his hair dif.
ferenOy or switching to Crest.
But George figured it was just one
or those things and looked .ahead to the
'68 opener, which he was to pitch at
Yankee Stadium.
After throwing a three-hitter, walk-
ing none and losmg the game 1-0 on a
CALI FORM IA IAL TIMOlll
••rhrbl ••r11r111 ltooor. ti S 2 1 I &vrord, Jb l o o o
Fr•-'· u ' , 0 0 &ldary, ,, " I I 0 J H&tl, ,, l 1 I 0 &lolr, cl • 0 I I
Httd, .... I 0 0 t F .Robln>an. 11 l 1 I t
JOhnslon~. ct t O t t I .Robinson, lb 2 o o o
it.icn.rdl. II ' 0 I I Po .... 11, lb l 0 I 0 Hinton, Ill I O t t O.JC!lnson. u J o I I
Schul. Jb l 0 t I f tcheberren, , • o 1 o
Rod91n, t • I I 0 l .Howawd, ,, I 0 0 0 l<llOOP, lb l e I o lrtbender. p 1 o o o
l •unoet. p l 0 I I Mo!IOtt, "" I 0 a •
A llodri9WL oh I 0 I 0 H~lson. " • 0 0 0
J H1mlllOI', P 0 I 0 0 O'Oono1111,.., 11 t O O O
Wn9'\t. p o I o o lltttt nmund. pit I o o o
Toltls l5 • 10 • Tol111 JO 2 1 2
C•lllorn•• 200 120 100 -' &•lllmor1 010 001 000 -2
E -D J.,,,,_, 111~. DI' -C111fornla l.
LOI -Ct ttlornlo a. k lltmon T. 211 -ROC!Qeu.
llalr. Etc,,.!»trtn. Hf! -R~J (I> ••• -Hinton.
Rlll'Or. SF -O. J011n1on, RtlCllt rdl.
" H It l:lt .. so Brunel fW,J.ll 1 ' 2 2 2 2 J. Hamilton )ll 0 a • > 0 Wtltlll ).l/J I 0 0 0 I 1. Howerd O /J T s > l 2 .,._, 7 Ill I I I ' 1 Nel1on If)" 0 0 • 0 0 O'Donovhu• 1.)/l , 0 0 0 2 WP -Btabtncllr, Tlmt -2:36 411t nN"'t -11.110.
home run by the aeventh ma.n ln New
York'• li.Mup, Brunet began to ~na.ider.
Perhaps he would look better with a
dillerent balratyle. Maybe It would be
nJce to vtait Blarney Oastle. And
what's wrong with a cb.ange or
toothpaste?
But now none of that will be oeoes.
sary, for it looks u though George
Stuart Brunet has weathered the
plague o( ill·fortW>e.
Today the <lserubs were wiodina up
U1eir five-game swing through the east
against tbe \\\ashin,gton Senators -
the outfit that Whipped them 12 of 11
meetings ii' '87.
Sammy EWa waa tcbeduled to pltdl
for the Aqela.
Tuelday the Halos will r t 1 t,
awalUnf Wednetday niiltt's bome
opener wittJ the Yankees.
_,,,,,,,,,,,.
WHITE
WASH
Vllllllllllllh
.,.,. • .,.m
Ranger's Shot Wins
PASADENA -Than.ks to a timely boot by former Coast
Ranger star Leif-Dag Wemeid, the Los Angeles Wolves opened
their North American Soccer League season on a winning note
Sunday afternoon in the Rose Bowl.
Be.fore a crowd of 6,183, Wemeid, with 58:30 showing on the
the clock, slammed in an unassisted goal for a 2-1 victory over
Baltimore.
The Wolves have another home game left before departint
for tbelr first 1968 road trip. Coach Ray Wood's LA team plays
New York's Generals Wednesday night at the Rose Bowl. The
club will then take off for games in Cleveland, Washington and
Boston.
Wood was elated with the victory over the veteran Baltimore
outfit.
"What a great way to start off the new league season,t• he
exclaimed.
lncredlble Masters
De V icenzo Grieves
Over Score Foul-up
AUGUSTA , Ga. (AP) -There's en
ink stain on the left breast of Bob
Goalby's green Masters jacket. It
doesn't show. B)l(._!t's there. It always
will be.
It was put there by the innocently
errant pen of Tommy Aaron. who kept
score for his playing i.oartner. Argen·
tina's Roberto de Vioert1.0 in Sunday's
1 ear·incredible wind-up of the Muters
Golf Tourl\8ment.
De Vicenzo, the balding. g}obetrotler
who won last year's British Open
Championship, was in the clubhouse
with a brilliant. seven-under-par 65 for
277, 11 under par. when G<>alby ca!lle
charging up through the pack and tied
him with r. final round 6.
PrepaNlllons for a playoff today
were in the making when it was
discovered de Vicenzo had signed an
incorrect card and Goalby was the
champion a declared champion csi a
bookkeeping error.
Hord Hardin, president of the U.S.
G<>U Association and chairman of the
rules committee. made the bombeheU
announcement:
"Under the rules of goll, be (de
Vicenzo) will be charged witb a 66,
which does not leave him in a tie Wi.til
Bob Goalby, who ls 11 under par.
"He ls second, 10 under par."
De Vicenzo. playing a round that
was jusl one shot off the Mastera
record. tapped in -a two-foot bi:rdie putt
on the par-4. 400 yard 17th boJe, just u
Goalby was catching him with a 10.
foot eagle putt on the 520-yard 15th.
Through a split-screen .accoont cl. ft
shown by CBS-TV. a n a t l o n a I
television audience saw the two putts
drop almost together.
But Aaron marked d<lwn a ~ on
de Vicenzo's card, instead of three.
"Thal shows what kind ol a coach I
am." Hannum joked in tbe 76en'
dressing room Sunday after the 110.
105 victory. It gave his club a com-
manding 3-1 lead and a chance to wrap
up the best-of·7 National Basketball
Association Eastern Division finals
tonight in Philadelphia.
The 76ers had seen ia 15-point lead
melt to four early ln the final period
and appeared in trouble when Hannum
decided upon the move be didn't
make.
Boston bad switdhed its defenses,
with Wayne Embrey guarding Wilt
Chamberlain While Player-Coach Bill
RusseU. who normally h an d 1 e s
Ollmberlaln, guarded J a c k s on .
RmtSell, however, was hanging back -
challenging JackSon to shoot from
outside.
jl ... 1t " Ooc17tt1 ~I Ptutad~tllftl& •• lO l(FI 16401
Ac>tll It Ood09r1 ti H~ Yo"°·, ll 00 ICF I 16'01
first major league team ever to start a
season by getting shut out in three o{
their first rour games -and Ostun
has been the victim or two of the
blankings.
The first came in the season opener
here last Wednesday night when
Philadelphia left-hander Chris Short
throttled the Dodgers with a fuur-hit-
ter, 2-0.
Kings Seek Knockout
In Stanley Cup Playoffs
R:iberto went on lo bogey the Jut
hole. Blinded by pressure and the
frustration of the bogey. he signed hia
card. And he was stuck with it -
stuck with a 66 ina~ad ol a 65.
ESCONDIDO DRIVER
DIES AT GARDENA
JackSC¥t responded by hitting one
shot which was ollset by a B06ton
basket, then connected on three
straight long jumpers to open up a 10-
point lead.
Hannum explained that be didn't
want the situation the Bosfun defense
wu creating. lk sent Chet WaDter,
who was out for a brief rest, back to
the scorer's table to replace Jack80ll.
''l fi!Ured if they were going to give
us the ·outside shot. Walker is a better
!hot than Jackson,'' Hannum said.
,HILAOIL,Hl4 IOSTOM • , T • , 1
~ " .. n _ .. > M II
Welt..-1 •1• 12 5encltt'• ) 1-1 7 c-1 .. 1 •u 22 lll/IMll • .. , , .
w .• t'W'ft • w " l .J-• 7-tt JS
~ . • 111-U ,. H41Y1tc.lr • ..... ' Grftft I l..J • ........ • 1-4 " .......... • M • s~ > ... " f~ t M ' Gr•'*'" ' ... ,
TNll:er • •• • T ... la • lMS Ill Tole,. » ,,.. , .. ...............
"""Mtlllftl• n ii 11 M -110
lkll!Oft 11 • ,, ,,_, ..
Fouled eut -"-·
lo!el ""'--"""~ .. "· .. * M. ·~ _,...,.
Perhaps you've forgotten, but Os·
teen had the dubious distinction last
season of serving up WilMe Mays'
Sllth career home run. It tied the San
Francisco center fielder with Mel Ott
for the all·time National League lead.
Osteen went Into the recon:I books
again Sunday when he struck out in
the second inning. Time was called
and the ball was given to BuMing as a
souvenir.
It made Bunning the first pitcher
'rTTSSUllOM LOI AHOILll
Wiiis, llll ,.,.,,, ..
Clemente, rf
$11.....-. If
(-lb
Ma..-1. a Mol9, Cf
J.INlf. c •-in. "
.. , IHtl .. ,~,,_.
• t 0 0 Parhr, lb 4 O 2 O
4 1 t l Verwnt1, u 4 o o o
) 1 2 • w.o.vii. Cf • o e O 4 I 1 0 l'elftv, rf 4 0 I 0
4 I 7 2 lritllY,., 2' 4 0 I 0
4 I 0 O Falrev, H ' I e O • o ? o tqlltr. c ? • I t ' t I t 11.lallty, Jb J O o o > 0 t 0 C.Osi.n, p 2 0 o o
PO!IOVlcll.111111000
11 ... n. II 0 0 0 0 T•le Ult l ~~ »ISO Pl~ 101 OllO ooe -l YI A-* toO GOO 000 -0 LOS -Pll!Mlurell J. i...,. A..,. let 6. 2S -~ ,Al19'" L-.... t411 -.Allrr Ill SI -~'·· ll"MllllllllO
l\l!Wflt IW,1 0) t J t I I I
C. Ollftll (L_.t) I t 1 > I I ._ft I I 0 " t I
lime -J:lt, ... """_ -,,,,.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Center
Gardon Labossiere had scared only
two goals since Feb. 8 and wa s on the
verge or giving up on himself. So were
the Los Angeles Kings of the NationaJ
Hockey League.
But today Labossiere is the hero of
the team and the latest reason the
Kings hold a commanding lead of 3-2
in the best-0f-7 series in tM semifinals
of tlte West Division's Stanley Cup
playoff.
The Kings fly away to St. ~ul·Min·
neapolis to meet the Minneapolis
North Stan in game No. 6 Tuesday
night. If the Kings win. it's all over A
loss brings the final game back to the
Forum on Frlday nJght.
What Labossi~ did was score two
goals within 15 seconds in the first
period against the North Stars at the
Forum Saturday nifbt as the Kings
won. 3-2 .
Just 2: 14 had ticked ofC when Lab·
bosiere. on a pass from Lowen
MacDona.k!. knodted one in from M
feet past goalie Cesare Maniago.
Al 2:29 Labossiere took an assist
near the goal from Ted Irvine and got
it past Msniago again.
Eddie JoyaJ 1eored for the Kings at
Lake rs Await NBA Finals
Aneels' fourth 1tralght victory ovtr
Sari Francltco, 108-100. n. LM.ft'I will meet either Boston
or Pbilldelpbla tvr tbe world tttJe but
the fi.o&ll won't begin until t2'e end of
the week.
Van Breda Kolfl WU pleued with
his uam'1 sbO'#lng aga.lnst the Wer-
riOl"I in the beat-d-7 playoff but said
he w• at.raid hil team might get
"ltaJe" If they ha~ to waJt until the
end ol tht week betore ptaytnc again.
Saturday'• llfn•,... touch and go,
with Jf!trf West bepi.D1 tbe Lakera
' surging by sco.ing 29 pointa.
As they hactThunclay, the Warriors
got l.nt.o foul trouble and were severely
t an<ticapped late tn tile same.
Fred Hetzel. San P' t I n c I I C o ' I
)eadJ.ng acortr wiMl tr, WU afdellned
with a:tx foo.ls 1rith Ove minute• left to
go.
Bill TtB11er al.Jo fou&td out a minute
\attt. creatin1 • thtlrUft ol Warrtor
forwards.
Su Ji'rUCllCO played 0.. rat of tile
f&ml with a ttne-1'*'4 oaeme.
12 :23 of the second to make it 3-0.
The North Stars stormed back In the
final period as W.ayne Connelly scored
at 7: 15 and again at 14:55. But the
Kings hung on.
This is the first Cup playoff for both
Labossiere and goalie W a y n e
Rutledge. who filled in for regular
Terry Sawchuk, sidelined by a virus.
Kings' Coach Red Kelly said he wiU
decide later whether Sawchuk or
Rutledge will start Tuesday. but noted
that he has no qualms about playing
Rookie Rutledge.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
w L Pct.GBL
Minnesota ....... 4 0
Detroit ....... :i l
Baltimore . .. .. . . . 2 J
California ........ 2 2
Boston ......... 2 2
Clevelnnd . ······· 2 2
New York ....... I 2
Oakland ········ 1 2
W ashingt;orl ...... I 3
Chicago ..... 0 3
,~ ......
(.alllOmla " 11111-. , C!tWlt l\d 7. l •!On I
O.troll s. (~~ • Cl• .......... 1 M....,,_,,., •• Htw Ytfll )
Wa"'l .... Oft I. Ollll ... l ,...,..k_
1.000
750
li67 11,oz
.500 2
500 2
.500 2
.333 2'-'I
.333 2"2
.250 3
.000 3~
Coll,,,..ftll IEllli, 0.., al W•thlnttoft (l"IKllfl,
•11. ICl•"C. !0:30 e II\, M9-Mle la. ..... 11, N °' _.II, I.fl tf lit.
llfMf'lt '""""""·Ml, .. 1~o111altd <Odom. .. , tt N"' .,.,,.. cs~.
Diltoll IWll-•11 It letlefl ((I/Ill, HI °"'• •• ..,.. ~
NATIONAL LEAGUE
w L
Houston .... ..... 4 1
St. Louis ... ..... 3 l
Pittsburgh . . .... 3 l
San Francisco .... 3 2
Atlanta ... ...... 2 2
Chica80 . ....... 2 2
New York ..••••• 2 2
Los Angeles ... .. 1 3
Cl nclnn.at.I ....... l 3
Phlla~lphia ..... 1 5 . ....,, .......
It llttburwll J. lOI ,.,,..._ t
(IM. ...... 11 .. """"•· -'-'-'· ""' s ... Fft!IC!Kt l:M. PM....._..11 1-1
Ntw Yn 4. Heullell e
ClllcffO 1. SI. l..olllt f
T•'l"t~
Pd.GBL
.800
.750 1,)
.750 l)a
.600 I
.500 lV.
.500 1\1
.500 l 'h
.250 21,1,
.250 2"2
.187 31,1
Plll\Mtll IVteto. M ) "" YI ~ tl"'-1 •tl, Ood9et $14MI!-. Kftl, ICWICW, I , II\.
"· ltllft 101"'911. M l tt AtlM!e ~ •ll, llltillf
MN YM'I ,..._, N) .. ""'"" IWllMll. ,.,,
"llM Oft!Y..-~
GARDENA. Calif. (AP) -~
driver Robbie Powell was listed in
good condJtion today with minor head
and back injuries suffered In a three·
car crash that claJmed the llle of
another driver at Ascot Park race
track.
Race driver and builder Hank
Henry. 42. of Escondido, Calif., w11
killed when his sprint car went into
Powell's on the fifth lap or the aemJ.
main event Saturday nighl He WU
pronounced dead on arrival at
Memorial l'lospital o{ Gardena.
FOR 1'61 •••
~
POUND FOR POUND
DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR THE
MOST LUXURIOUS SPORTS CAR
HU61 SILICTIONll
COLONY PARK
STATION WA60N
II' LINC°'-N CONTINllCTAl M.AOI A
n4TIOH W400N THI• WOUl.0 II fT
UCATIOM TIMI 11
AIOU• THI COINR ••• ... rn TIMI TO CHOOSI
THI CONTtNINTAL Otl
STATION WAeoMS
JOHNSON & SON
ORAN$1 COUNTY'S OLMIT DTAIUIMll UNCOLN ..... Cfl'f. COU.Al MAUI
.. WIST COAST HIGHWAY, NIWPOltT llACH Ml-mt 6CM91f
-CLOalD 8V••AY-
·~ ,,
---==--=-~~-~~=:::::----------.=..--~-------~-------------~-------------------.... .---. .............................. --. ..
..
'·°'*'· Aorll ~. 1961
Orange I 'r . . . County Spikefest 'Record' Success
RIGHT IN STRIDE -Al Rockwell Oeft) and Ron Copeland (USA)
clear third hunlle in fliJlht of 10 while runnini 480-yard shuttle
hurole relay Saturday night. an event that established a world
record clock:iniz ol 56.2 for Capeland and his Southern Cali!ontla
Strider teammate.. Rockwell was running for the Athens Athletic
Sports
Briefs
LONG BEACH -~
Sakamoto, • Moot-~ 11'1•
pounder from eie Umnnity
of Soutt>enl cadifoniia, is the
nation's all-cound ,,m·
nasties champion today.
Sakamoto won tbl'ff tn-
dlvidual Wle1, placed •
cond ln another event and
third in two ottiers as well
as tMing the all4I'OUDd title
in the National AAU am·
nast.lcl meet.
Wbtn tbe three-day event
wound up S a t u rd a y ,
Sak.amoCo had woo the big
borte, tile parallel bars and
the borlJodal bar, ~
second in the &oc.-exerclle
and was tblrd in tbe riDp
and the aide bone.
* *
Club. Alt.bough not recognized by the world record committee
the winning time served u an Amencan record, betterint the old
mark of S&.7 set in 19e5 by Western lllicblon. Rlalpb Bostco. Gary
Power and Tom White were Copeland's teammates. .
Two No-hitters
Major Leagues
Eyeing LePage
"He .always did throw bee·
bees," Wigmore says.
"But he worked hard last
su~r and it's reaUy paid
off."
He's not kidding.
Against Verbwn Dei last
Thursday, ttie 5-10, 17(}.
pound LePage struck out 19--
of·21 batters. He struck out
lS S«vite bitters t w o
weekends ago In registering
his first 1968 no-hltter.
He'll go after another one
next Tuflday against St.
John Bosco.
And he's no slouch with
the timber. Hittiog around
the .400 level, W.lgmore usea
LePate in Che ln&ld wtien
be isn't~ eo as not to
keep bis bit out " the lineup. He's hit tWQ home
l'\ml 10 fw. · I.artel1 b e c .a u ae ol LePac•, Mat« Del iJ in Ure
midst cl one of its fmest
baseball seasons.
Relav Teams in Spotlight .,,
8y RAY PUJ!XO ol .. ....., ,,...,...,
-What a way to open a mowt
It wa1 billed aa the iD· •uaurai Orange County
Invitational track and lleld
meet and though still WM
betii.od the ..... it may be a
decade befcn tt>ey cu
come Up with a better tn·
eort.
TW "ftl tbe ICene at tbo
Y{estm..... Hieb School
oval 8Mladwf nlOlt U MDI ol tbe top male aftd temai. ..,, ... iD the UDKed St.Itel'
e-111~ their eftorta for
DO -tbm two ''world reccrdl.''
Boston, Gary Power, Ron
Copelaod aod Tom White
breezed to a 56.2 clocking ln
tbe 48().y#tf thuttle hurdles
-erutng the old mark of
M.7 let by Western
MJdtipn ln 1965.
1be foursome was
representing the SoutMrn
Callfomla Striders a n d
roceived a fiDe pulb tram
tbe MbeDI At!lletic Cl~ Of
o.tland ea route to tbe
Meu'a Dee DtBusk and
Jarvi.a Scott "M timed i!I
l :tl.!l.
That bypaneJ tbe old
mark set in 196$ by th
ClevelaDd Rea dtlon Club.
a 1:43.9 et~t.
However. tbe.t e w e r t
other outstandl.ne marks as
high jumper El Caruthers
rleared 7·2 for the tecOlld
beat effort Jn tlbe wwld.Uia
)'Ur and It allo eqoaUect bij
IUetime beJ!.
met. 1~----------------.....
ADd lt WU a D 0 t h er
Soatbel1l Callfonlia eDb'ant
ttllt accounted for tbe ~
t"ODd mart as tbe Las
Aas•••• Mll:cmreOea
foanome ot Barbara Fe.--
Boftver, by wiB dr-reD. PwMUa GI-. ~
an unoffJdal utert.at behind ----------------~--~-1be .... , timea -...
tile men'• 41D-rard lb1ltOt
bunSJer. DOf 1be WOIJllWI •1a 1prtnt medley rei.,
are noopbed by the warld
~oninC r e c or d com.-
~.
In fact tbe DAILY PILOT
Jredlcted Saturday t b •
men'• standard would fall
and WI it did.
1be fOUl"IOIDe o( Ralph
* * * Ml!WS --I. Dew flWrl ll'CC), ~ T .. ~.1.l?J• a. .. ...._ ~JUMP~.._ ... -.1 ~ Ill~ Ital. _,. NlcMlll
I ~)RELAY -1. c.t P'ofV (ll.0), 1
tlr~I. ~ 0. .......
-. • "·' IP'lnt :t fMIMl. lflGH J ~ -I. Ed Catvhn ~a.,~,.~~'· a. .HNI
*SHW'T..J:! HUIU>l.H _:_J.
• AhNAc ~°T.2' ofm _ ... ,_.... ow _,, il.7 ....
r~ ~~-'· O.ve ~ ISCVYVlL 1 Jallft ~1111 (VNft,), I. Ca,, Wlln" (U.S. Army~
~N'S SltltlNT M l!~ll!l, :~YD~~_.11 ~-= >.'1.W :·: 1~J. {Hew
~"-.I. Old -.I: 1:4Ul. MEN'S 220 -l. FrtY (MtN
Cofl19t), 2. lleevn llEAC), ~. 11191,..ld ltobln10n (UCLA Frca~)-21.A.
si'S2~.e1 lt.~ h~. ~.":':= 1scV'VV>-'"'° 1won °" ta.tit 01 fMer ,,,,_,_
MILL-'< On IU. a. Army>, 2. ~7,JJ,N'f UMtf.), I. M<C•ll• IP'CCI.
MILE llEUY -I. U.S. Army, 2. Strid~. 3. S.rr J-Slllt -J: 10.•. DISCUS -I. Gory Carlton ISCS), 2.
8111 NwlUe (PCC). >. P1rry O'lrl..,
IUNl, '-I.MTV K-.dY <MCI. J. Jc11111 ~ IMC), Dlttance -ltt.ll'h. 'fWO.MILE WALi( -Doll 0..._ ISCS), 2. Aon Laird {NYAC), >. Doll
Tothetoh (SC$), 4.. LillTY Walltr UCS), S. Jim Ha111ft' {SC$), Time -IJA.1.
JAVELIN -l. P'r-C-111 IP'CC), 2. Didi ~ IUSA~C), J. JoM
Burns (M CI, 4, Lesx Tio""" (UN), S.
John Fltnlm,_,. ISCS), Dl:slan<e: ~ ..
120 14H -1. Tommr White ISCSI. J.
Int be glad you're 11ot Ute dllYerl
.., ........... ff..,.,.-llthu.L ... ~
...... 1111111 .......
[-.YwllrNllaJ ............ 10,000 Ila 11 ha...,,._,
Y• 11t rr......._,.,.Nldchtck, w. ..._...___..._
Ill Jlllt w .,. And• ANllOO, ,_.~la 1•1 can•,,_.. 1if
--ANllaJ c:.Mlra ... to c:amt.
!Wly ..... ""' I llllf, -Pl'llWI •••
,. __ .._,,_, .. I I 1111 .. AAmeJ ~ ....,.....,Tb '1r11-.11··r·~
COSTA MESA 17 45 Newport Bl. 646· 1666
6AIDIN 6IOYI 9541 6 1rd111 &.o•• llvd .... 6Jt.1200
LON6 llACH 1629 lo"g luch llvd. (2131 436-9719
LON6 llACH e NORTH 5H4 Cherry A ... 12131 423-1461
IANTA ANA 929 E. Fin t St ............. 147.9431
Poul K.,.,,. (SCSI, l. Larry u ... n .:==================== (M C}, Time: U.O.
TltlP'LI! JU~ -1. Cher'-Crel9 IP'CC), 2. Ted o..11111 IMC), l O.ve Jlldtsoft (9C SI, 4. Me--.. Sernw II (PCC), Oltnnc.: ,...._
MEN'S 100 -1. Dive lt-CIEAC), J. Mike ~.., (MCA). l. C«ll
TurMr (CP), 4 Mel Pender CUSA),
ri .... : t.7.
WOMEN'S 1• - l. lerllere Ferrell (UMl, 2. 0.. 0.llUSll (LAMI, l .
P'emella Glen (LAMI, Time: lt.7.
MEN'S .WO -1. loll Tobler CUSA·
PAC), 2. Padflc CC. l. So. P-M , Time: 44.7.
MEN'S J-MILE -1. P'1t Tr1v-ISCSI, 2. ~ WleOe (USA~ACI l.
Jc11111 Kll\MdY (UN), Tlme: l :JO .... MEN'S llO llELAY -I. C•I P'oty (St.01, 2. Pedfk CC, J. Se. P'INdtne M , Time: 1:15.J. WOMEN'S 2'lO -I. lartler• l'errell (LAM), 2. J-9 Mecferlene IUN), l.
OM 0.llUllt {LAM), Time: 2U.
... INT. HURDLES -l. lton
WllllMY {SCSI, 2. Torn Wv1tt CAAC),
W..,,.. Colleftt IUCUI. Time: 5U.
WOMIN'S MO -I. J e,..,,lt Scott
CLAM), 2. ~.,,..... Dick-ISMMI, l . C1rol Glva (SAit). Tlm41: 2:12.7.
PITTSBURGH ·-T It e
Plttaltwp ptpen It a T e
take11 tile AIMl'tua Bullll&-
blaD Attedatloa'a Eatten
Dlt1aloa utle wttb only eae
Jou Ill eight games. Bwt
tbey e:rped ft to be a UttJe
tougher a t a t 1 1 t New
Orleaat fer Uilt leape
championship.
"I tblM tt'll c• aevea,"
Hid Coaeh VtKe Canetta
af&.er &be Plper1 whipped tbe
Mbutelo&a Mnldt1 llf.t•
Su11day Dig.ht to wt.a the
belt-of-7 terltl f.l.
Sellout for Fight?
* * *
l
t '
!:::=-::=~:='C~=~--------....... _. o.;1--------... -· .. ---.. . ... -.. -.
~ hi
Jd re
b,
I~
~
-· . -. .. . .. . . -. ----. . -·-. . ....... "' --·---------~ --
Mowr. A11tll 15. 1968 DAIL y PllOT Z7
Hot Strea k Nets .462 Batting Log
I
. Mater Dei's Walsh Sets Area Pace
. SOuTH PACIFIC H~RDWARE -Mrs. Vi Stever of Newport Beach displays
some of the awards she won on her recent month-long fi~ng expedition to th e
· South Pacilic. Mn. SteV4U' wu declared the overill winn« of the fishing com-
pttitioll. Over 30 anglers competed in the Air New 1.ealand tournament.
·Stever Duo Tabs Baja
South Pacific Second Rate
~en Marlin Prime Target
&tops for the tournament.
The subsequent ail.es were
New Zeaaand and TabiU.
By~~
Tom WalMb Of M.ter Dei
bM pullecl 1ato the top spot
amocc Orqe Coast area
..... rib. bNltby .462
AV9N8e.
Wa!lb, w i t h 18-for-39,
moved from tbe previous
roll where he stood fourth
whb •. 4Cf1.
Ria bat and teammate Joe
LePage'a pitdl.in& are ~
ly responsible fOI' t h e
Monarchs' 11-3 record.
In aecood place la Wayne
Kiefer ol Weetmmster with
.428. 'Ibat, &1oog wMb Bob
Weller'a .3Si -good for the
ninttl spot orf the Utt -are
two reasons wb.y the Lions sport an 8-3-1 mark. Dan
Meyer, another Monerch, ls
10th with a .341. '
A third .400 hitter is Bob
Wickerstlam of Huntington
Beach. Wicken1ham sports a
.416 on 15 hits in 36 at·
tempts.
Just under the .400 mark
is Tom Bullard of Estancia•
wit.h a .395. BuUard led the
last Top 10 list with a .419 -
but slipped slightly.
Bullard is joined by two
other mates -~k Perry
and Bill Powell.
Perry sports a .380 in
seventh and Powell follows
with a .378 -good for tile
eighth spot.
Newport Harbor's Bob
Leavy holds the fifth J>06l·
tion witti a .392 percentage.
A minimum of 28 at bats
is required for selection in
the top 10.
Area Top 10
Al M Av1.
•
A Jiifefune fisherman who
bas JU5t returned from a
mootn-laog toumament in
f*le South Pacific bas cast a
t trong vole for ttie waters
oft Baja California.
The 32 anglers caught 13
saillish, a 280-pound atnpc-1
marlin and a surplu, of
ll>!bacore and tuna in the
week 's fi alling o!'
Queensland.
'fahili and "'"!>tied it for
teven hours ~t>fore gi·11ng
up. Two other 3nglers land-
ed a 108-po• 11.I i>lue ma 7,,in
dnf4 a l60·pot.1nd b l ii c it
marlin. Wal"' fMO ,. .. ·"'-.
Manny Stever and his
wlfe, Vi , 211 Santa Ana
.\.Ye., Newport Beach, just
~ed from competing in
t&e Alr New Z e a l a n d •
sponsored "Southern Cross
Tournament" in Australia.
TaruU and New Zealand.
Stever. 59. is a semi·
retired angler who beloogs
to the Balboa Angling Club
and lA8 Pescadores, •
Soutb.laod i.ming club.
Mrc. St.ever wu the
overall winner f« t h e
toomam~. defeating ·31
other American angten.
"The f i s h i n g was
generally poor in the SouUl
Pacilic," Seaver 1aid Tburt·
day.
"From my experieoce, I'd
have to say the best marlin
fishing in ttie world is off
Baja Califomia. There are
bigger marlin elsewhere,
but not as many."
Stever boated a 203-pound
marlin in 841ja iat1t year and
his wife 1.rncP.d a 26<'·
pounder two years ago.
The Stevers left IM
Angele!! C11 • their South
Pacific expedition Jan. 19.
Tbey flew to Honolulu tor
some preliminary angt:ng
before departing for Cairns.
off the e!sl coast o f
Qutensland, A u s tr a 11 a
cairns was the first ol thrH
,.,. ,......, "~' 1'. '"' l'lnl ..... 1141 I'. M. C....., I I'll!
l'llUT RACe . 6 '"''°""· 3 ner o!M. c1e1m1.,.. PurM MOIO. Ta. ci.1,,.1,..
prlef tlOOO I~ IW Harrlt l
OoidtneN (II C.mH•l $Wm 1o¥ IA 1'1-7)
SNrl.., ltullr IW ~) lllO NldO (0 l'ltrc.) Go'*" .. lcon'f IM v1..,ruei.l ~ 0 .1'. IM YIMll
llo<IKI" Tom IL f'lllQY Jr)
Gr....W LI,,. IJ L_....ll ,......... '°" (J Seltortl El Grer IW IMr"'81tl
W!Mle -(J Trullllo)
'" 116
114
116
116
116 lit
116 ,,.
116
116
116
Then came a week off tt.e
New Zealand cC1asl.
"The fishin~ was poor nit
New l.ealand," Stevet" said.
"We c.rng:.t two blue
sharks that week end that'a
c.U."
Mever b().)ked into a nuge
Pacific Big E.ye tuna at
Despite the generally poor
fi.;hlng, two ;:.-cord'S .werP
broken .
Kitty Tobin. a Los Altos
angler, landed ll 97-pounJ
saillisb on JO.pound test line
for a women's Australian
record. And Son Diego
flSMrmMI AJ Ogle's 2;3.
pound blac'i. ma:-lin on 3i1-
pound test line set anothr r
Aussie recor:!.
ICltftr IWM ) tt 12 .All
Wld<tnh•m ( .. Ill 3' IS ,416
1u11arc1 c est) ,, 11 .395
lHVY (NHI 21 11 ·"' Porry (fill •2 If ·* l'OWlll (b l) 37 ,, .371
SoboMwllll " IS .365
Weller (WM) ,. 10 .117
Mntr IMDI 41 1• .Ml
Corona del Mar
CORON,\ DIL MA• (f.7)
Jt.M-n
llandtl
Teel.r
II. Snyder
11 .....
Cha..-v
Al M 1 1 ,. 1l
" u .. 11
l t s
16 '
Ave.
1.000 ..m
,Jll .21s ·"' .lJO
Pirates Drain 'Gold' 0 sr ... .ier Pieter c.,,,, •• ,
""-" AllllOft
JO 7
' 1 3A ' ,. 6
.13:1
.200
.176
.lM
.IU .., -Fro~ San Diego Vein
Wll&redtt
L<llCll
lr--
Setlle
.. .
11 1 11 t
ll 1
2 •
E1ttltlria
.on
.OS. .oao
The largest gold drain to
hit tile United St.tes this
year occurred Saturday l n
San Diego as the Orange
Coast College P i r a t e s
brought home 14 medals
from the San Diego Relays.
OCC will now meet Mt.
San Antonio April 19 at
Walnut in an Ea 1 t er n
Conference duel billing.
Every OCC traclmlan who
made the trip came home
with a medal Saturday. The
performance was a startl Ing
about.face after the Pirates'
troubles last week .t ttie
Southern Cal Relays.
The Buca at San Diego
Hollypark
Entries
Flltfll f.11lc (I Val.,,1"41•1
Kumar! cw Htrrltl
Tum lo Nonh (0 l'Mlrt1I
I ftSUrNUeblO It l'lllUY Jr l
Felli ... LMVfl (J S.lt.n l
Mt¥Mv l o• ( R v orll l
Fleet N Cui. (A PIMda)
Pr-I 0.llw<Y IW H1rmall)
Min Elfie Nltrw IM YMWll Amll9r V-(W _.,,
11ve11TM •aca • ., 11M """' t11
.... lllrl, • ..., ... -•• A .. .__.. .._ -n. ..... ....... .......... ..... ,.......,._,
ltl#Wll"9 WW. (A l"!Mel) IU
Trecler Ille (M Y-1 IU
Le I""' (W ,......,...) HJ -~ (J ......,, "' C-Nor (I V....._le) 11'
$'-! T .. (A ~I 114
Cusl,,.ro (J IAfMtnl llP
IClcll ledl (0 "9111 111 ,.....,, °' llllliM (0 l'lit!w) 114
lledlell O.V CL ,.,_,, Jr) 119
Ar< ltll Clll II (W Merrtll 114
116 ltt
"' "' 11•
11• H• ,,, ,,, n•
took second in the 440 relay
in 43.3, wit.h the team of Ed
Shipley. Jeff Baker, Mike
Ogden and Ralph Kelly.
The same foursome then
combined to take second in
the 880 relay in 1 :29.2. In
that event, Kelly turned In a
21.3 (220l leg around a
curve, smas'hing his old
mark of 21.5 set this year.
OCC took third in the mile
relay in 3:22.2 with the team
of Kell y. Pete Figgatt. Ter·
ry Schmitz and D a v e
Stephens.
Howaro Batt took serond
in the discus with a toss or
143-2. Les Bland took fourth
in the pole vault with a 13-6
effort.
OCC took fourth in the
sprint medley relay with a
time of 3:33.6. Running were
StepheM, Shipley, Kelly and
Schmitz.
OCC was c o m p e t I n g
against 12 sdlooU from
throughout Sou~em
California, Including Mt.
SAC and Fullerton o{ the
Eastern Conference.
UTANCIA (Ml
Al " AYI .
Ouf'llnlt 5 l MO
llUllerd 0 17 ·"' Perry 42 16 .390
P°""'ll l7 u .311
Cornullt JI 10 .m
llowM 41 If .7'2
LOH!ll lP • .2'3 ....... 1' f .206
Colt l5 1 .2CIO
Swln n 2 .1'3
Morr I Miii ,. t .us
Ibey • 1 . Ill
Currltl 12 0 •• Saini I • .000
Huntington Beach
MUNTINeTON IM-1)
WldttrtP!tm C1ntrell
°'--' ,,,,,.,,,.
He""°" I . SftYdff
ll'l'dlr
Al N An.
l6 u ,,416
5 , ·'°° JI t 290
• ' .2JO • , 250 u 6 .140
30 1 .m
CM Badminton
Badminton .ltatruction is
available at the Costa Mesa
High girls gym every Tues-
day night.
The Costa Mesa Re<:n>a·
ti on l>epartm«tt holds the
~verit from 7 tn 8 p.m . The
fee 11 $3.
9•• Haft WHAT WI otlOC •••
811 aanDN·TllTI
IHI UIDDD•
''ROY1M8 e•OUMD'
I ,,___ ___ t..,...,...._.L_ ---""'~ -.,._ ,.._.. .. -.,.... .......... -........ .,._ 1. ...... .,..... .. "'"'.,_, ~ ............ --.......... -.................. __ ,
Han WHAT YOU ,..., OUT ... ·-......... -..._ ..... _ ___ .. _.. ___ .. _,.. ....................... __..,.
ttan HOW rr wons .. . aUICKLY Tl\.L VDU THI '-t'I _ _........._ ... __ ....., .............. ...... IXAGT COMDrrtOll __ 190_.,._.,.__,., .. _ ..... , , ....................... ...
D' VDU" CA"
_., __ , ___ .,. ... __ ... ___ ....... ~ ... -.. ........
._ '9rlr
...,, 0 ....
--. .. 1
-
--.... --.. --............. -...,, .. ..., -'--r'\ ... .,..,.. -..... .. __ ._ ............. °"' __ .. _.....,. ..................... ........... ,,,, ......... ..... ~ _...,,,.
1tut1 II ' .211 Mariaa tutw M • .u. Jtloter Del W~•tmltuter
OlwOll • I .1 .. MA•INA (M l •• M Ave. MATllt 011 (114) *l$TllilllOTU , .. ,.,,
S.lbWt • • .1• Ke ... II , .tn Al " A••· Al " ""'·' .. ,.. n • .111 C4W'Mll M , ,,.,
l'lnt.r I , .1U Mo• 1t J '"° Crlt! 11 1 .... e-' I .llO c ........... 7 • .000 Allen14111 " • .co FI0\4 , • .... wmldl " 4 .uo Moett t • .act Motil u J .no
Oedrldr • 1 .Ill
Wiii 1 I 1.000 l'rlc• l 2 Afl(l<U4n 5 J Krerntr 2 I .JOO McDonald • 2 Wat.ii ,. II .A62 l(ltfff u l2 Mowr fl 14 .~I Grane 11 ' Gabi. J I ..m Jen11lnts 2S • J Llnllfrt • 2 ..Jl:J Weller ,. 10
f'elllttaln l'•lletf Oiw , 10 1 .Hit J~ 11 ' ·°'°
L1Pa .. ,, " ft1 I lair 16 ' ....... u 1 .292 11-1S ' Tudlff ,.....,,.¥ " 7 .no n I .OU ,OUNTAIN VALUY IH I .. ...,., " t ,.., Meyeda 42 11 I L'-11 ,, I .21• .......... • 2
Al " A ... letlttn 4 • .ooo
Au .... ~ 22 • .JU 1'1"'61d: • • Ml w ..... • 1 .w 0.-.. l • .ooo FIYM u a .JU
Olfloe JI 6 .lfl Ca.ta Me1a Prlu 17 l .174
Claril'°" " J .IM COSTA Ml!SA IHI T-20 a .uo "' " A .... Atl..,_ 2) , .Ill Wtlmwr 7 J .m aovi. 1A a ,IU ~I 41 1J .JU Davit ti t .ttJ l'tUI 1' 1J .ll)
...... , 27 , ·"' w. M<Gtr!Mv 24 s Schr-r 10 s .250 ,. • McGtrtn.ty 10 4 WtrtMn-•7 II .t~ "-" n l Wllll•m& " , .too How. lO 4 M11,_ 24 • .167 lmi"' 1• ,
SlntY 16 2 .IU Oedride • I Mel( .... u , .., NW,,.,, 11 • C1rroll • • .000 ltk:llmond I 0 Ar,..,.,. J I .toll H1rdY l 0
w11111n-" I .071 Ramlru JI 10 .m lttHtr ,. 1 .0'1 Towner " • ..no S••"' 1 • .000 S.r1on 16 • .. v.,-... It • .000 Kl,.. JO 1 .2ll Stenltt 3 0 .aoo Wlllsti. ,. t ..ue ltobcr!I u 0 .aoo Clart. '3 • .1• Htll 2 0 .eoo Ed'#llrds " 2 .IOS Hlntlty 12 , .Ill!
Walter Winchell
N~rt Beach MuunRI II Ht ..... M • • ... • ... says~
"Let Executive show you why ft coata
len te le11e your new car than to buy
It, ud 1iOW macb more convell.lent It
CH be!''
.. _rick NIWf'OllT ( .. SI lf • .eoo
Curry
Lu w S. Htnln
t a•an111911
Wamtr
Lonened<or K, H1ntev
Wu hko
Trovono
Strublt
Oalu boUI
Mallnoll
WeO.stt r
Cn ar•
lt•n
81•~ HOI
Martin
Al M Av1. Lag1111a Beach I • .500
ti 11 .3'2 U.OUNi\ 11+1) 14 s ·"' Al M An. u s .JJJ lltnnlno 2 I JOO 14 , .ltl $chml11 ,. 1t .m JI • • 2.11 IC•sler ,. I .2N 12 3 .>SO McOCIMtll ,, 1 .u• JI 1 .m krani 1l > ,2)1 s 1 .:IOO $"-otnl ,. 6 .231 u 3 ,2CIO Sc,,...., 2' 5 .192 " ' .uo Kulln 17 s .115 IJ 2 .15J llollu u 2 .IJJ u 2 ,133 Htld 16 t .lli " J .no Wllll1ms 12 , ,., • • .000 Pel,,..r If 1 ,...,
' • .000 Wllbur J • .000 ' • .OCIO Tsullanlnl t • .ooo J I .000 lerman l • .000
PHONE TODA y I
EXECUTIVE
CA.R LEASING COMP.A.NY~
•• Otwte C..11ty
Kl 7-3011
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
3 DAYS ONLY!
MON.-TUEs.:..wED.!
AUTO C•NTllR
USE YOUR
EN NEV
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
TD DAVI
Professional motor
tune up include$
all parts and labor!
11.88 15.88 17.88
Volkswagen 6 cyllftclff lcyliMer
Carefvl installation by our highly skitfed tervlcamen of new pdnts, '*9. rater,
condtlftler and distributor COf>' expert adjustment of ca.dwell, timiRg and car·
buretor. Results& more 'pep', better mileage, men ~ cirMnGI
Like to tune your own car?
DO-IT-YOURSELF EQUIPMENT
~
24.95
Pow• tlml .. llght Dwell ta•1•1W
Don't miu our frH Pit IOl1 safety·checkl . ...,...,
• Uehts
•TINS . ....
NEWPORT BEACH
(Fa1h i o1t Island)
HUNTINGTON BEACH
(Huntington Center)
,.., •• .JOI ,,,.
~ ·"' .J .... ~ .u:. •• ... ·~ .I
,1291
.oat
000
.000
'
t
J
...._.-.,. .... _ .. _ ----· ... ·-....-... ,,_·-··----· -_ _... .. ~·· ... -·-_____ __, __ ... ___________ --..---~ ..... ~ .... ..,.__._._ __ .
..
•' •
• '
. . .
Sears
'NO
MONEY
DOWN
On AnJ11Unr
Toa Bay at
Sean cm Creclit
ALLSTATE Pauenger
Tire Guarantee
~ .... .....,.._, All failurw of the
tire ,..itq from aormal '* buardl or ct.-f.et. In mafertal or worlananahlp.
-.bLB• l•c; J'QL ~l!!· o( th• ~ tr.&d. -
~....,. wm 0o1~11&JJ punctune at
no charse. In th• cue of failure, tn excbaqe
for the tire, replace It, ch&r&1n.r ouly the pn>-
portica ot eurrat recuJar "111111 price pllUI ,.ederal J:xclle Tax that npreeet. tn&d Ulld.
Traci Wear-Out Guarantee
~ ~' Tn9d nar~t. r. Bew 1Aas1 Tb• number of montti. .,.cf· n.cs. WW ...,_ W11 Do: In tlltCb&nf• for tile
UN, "Place It, ~ the CWTtnt recuW •lllna' price phaa J'tdlri1 ExclM Tax 1.. the
foll~ allowance. ...... o.n.-.. A.llowaMe
12toM 101l'
2'1toll 20~
12 Big Reasons Why Sears
BRAKE RELINES
Are Better and Safer for Your Car
~au* AD 4 Whede for only J1'
............. c, ....
....... u..-p ........ .......... . ...... il"""' CJI , I ..................
• p eLAilUIN .. ....
Regular
$169.95
. .. ....
.
149 7 ~ ............ ~ •rr-• • hate c.oMlown time for "rlPt·now" comfort •••
• ~ c.r .M. for 119ter 'air dmdati-. cools ear
• sa.......,.... .,.._ ... aoata ..-duL. .,.rt,_.., ..... .......
.. -
27-Month
Nationwide
Guarantee
IUencer IJ u tt o • 1
be1p 1r.., tnad pat-
tern ope for bet-
ter tracUoa at all
apMdl.
I a fl t y 8bou.ldtn
help make lt"'1'1q
euter and help roll
• over nita without lurclllnr.
Your Choice Any Sh:e Listed
Blackwall
ONE LOW
PRICE! 3a_a
l'.a.r . ...
Guaranteed 18 Months Ot• l'h•
• '-c--wwtar ~.,., .. .,. ...
• Esdulft Dy..-r ntllMr ............
• a.-,,.... ....... ,.,... tire .....
Whitewalla OnlY $2 More Per Tire
....,. l•n*'
"'-.......... .... .. ..,...,~ .
llattwr ...... 61Nttn.
A1W IO _,., •• ,..i.oe
die ~. ti .... eetl .. ......... ,.. ..., ,., . ...... ., .........
....... tM nplV
............ lltM ... ., .......... ~ _._..., .... ., ..,......,
95
6.50xl3
Tubeleu
Blackwall
Plm.Sl.81
F .E.T. and Old Tb
• Detdgned for fut. afer highway 11J)ffds
• Encfneered for better traction, mer 1tope ... rr-ttt drlvinr mileage
• Price for Price ... Value for Value ••• Allstate
XSR tires are your best buy l
Now Available at Sears
STEEL CORD Radial Tires
Ask Your Ti.re Salesman About Them
Guaranteed 36 Months
Powerful 12-Volt Battery
12-Volt
Regular $17.99
SAVE 'S! Guaranteed
42 Months
WghVoltqe
12-Volt Battery
ReruJar $20.99 1599
,
L
I
,
Now,
The
About
Oscars
By VERNON SCO'rl'
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -
Now. about i.st week's
Academy Awat"ds:
The show, as us~. ran
too long.
Some of the celebrities ap-
pe~ as lf they were
dbguised a. priests wkb
whi~ turtlene.ck shirts and
black Nehru Jackets.
Biggest surprise w a s
Katharlne Hepburn's win·
ning best actr .:ss. S h e
mostly cried t h r o u g b
"Guess Who's Conung t.o
Dinner."
Academy members were
not stampeded i~ voting
for tbe modish. trend-setting
"Bonnie and Clyde," which
won only a single award.
Th.at Oscar, incidentally
was justifu!d. E s t e 1 1 e
Parsons W8$ awarded the
best supporting a c t r e s s
laurels. She was terrific as
the moronic Blanche Bar·
row.
• Angela Lansbury stolf' the ~how in the entertmnme-nt ~epartmeot with her slng1n1?
·and dancing, a t r u 1 y
versatile performt>r.
B a r b r a Steisand
peered as lf the ei>ttn pro-
~gs bored ber t.o death
and ttiat she'd rather be
bt'clt in Brooklyn watching
t~ show on black and white
televisioo as she did oot so
many yean ago.
Unquestionably. the besl
picture of the year. "In the
Heat of tbe Night," was
justifiably rewar~.
Just as surety. R o d
s·~iger bas become ooe of
America's foremost actors
and earned his Oscar the
bard way -through sheer
lalent and dedieation.
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 "Erin go ,,
6 Well quallllelf
10 Termites
14 Kind of
thread
15 Stomath
11> • antlco: Blatlc
'"arble 17 ··of roses
18 Feel anx ltty
1' Tun
20 Rals1n9
nap on cloth
22 lmpor tanl Canadl111
eJporl
23 Afrlc1n native
viii age
24 Character In
Shakespeare
26 Athletes' ~rOU!>: A~r. 2' What's
the •1'' 31 Carmrnt part
32 Former U.S.
coin: 2 words
34 Captlv at•
JS Alrlca.ri ruler
3' -banana .o Fish 42 Discover
45 Conf0tmlty
wllh the n0tm
48 Ptrcti>tlon
of soulld
49 Wtll-ltnown uuylst
SO Pasture
Sl Well·known
executive stronghold 55 Ultlmatt S7 Competing
58 Milky liquids
63 Unequal: Comb. form
64 Caft au -
ltS Simple uni urned
person '6 X • • Y, u y -Z:
2 •0tds '7 Llltlt
onr: ~ord
tndin9 6S Feminine
nilllt
'' Numerltal suffix
70 Struct.urt 71 Gtrman city
DOWN
4115/ltl
10 Skin 40 Dutcr~ttd
rruptions 43 Poktr
11 Upri9hl post player's
lZ Pub I It word pros rcutor's 44 Numtrlcal prtfix
13 :~~~n 46 Sudanese
21 Take aboard monrtary
22 Reporter's 47 :01~u111en tal conctm 1 Sheep cry 25 First •ord Sl Venemous 2 Baptism, of many snake of
for one titles As la
3 Travel u Star In Big 52 Clunu
l 1 p· DI In water 19en s grou . pper 53 Avoid:
Abbr. 27 Baseball, Archalc 4 lluch used · football or 54 Below:
bu tiding hockey Port;
mattrl1I 21 Dismounted 5' Bay of 5 Dlntnttr 30 Supply front ut1b· ntlsfactlon Fundy llshtd d091111 for fuwru
It CaJH ol 33 llle111ber of S' h1s~c1 , lruway srcret organ· 60 Artists
dt lay Intl on 111ed1u111 7 Breakfast 35 PonHr 61 City In
food 36 -and Utt F 11
I l uslcal f« all N0tlh
dlrtctloll 37 Cllfistlan 62 ''· llluslal 9 Fe1111lt ensant 1n &4 Fm1th anllul Ottoman word for t11plr9 25 Down
11 I
•
Sinatra Jr.
Taking Over
For Martin
Cast Provi.des 'Lightning'
As Original Drama Debuts
'==1
Who Goes to Films?
Only 18% of· Public
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOO'O (M'l
V a I e n t i by D a n I e .1 '
Yankelovich and Associatet,
and it analyr.es w h a t
Americans go to the movies and bow ofUn.
It should SUJ1>rise no one
The film industry is M·
joying lits annual euphoria kl
the wake of die Academy
Awards. But soon lti.e gloom
will retoum.
The film capital has been
del)ressed, mentally as well
as economically. The movie
unioos have been making
dire statements about the
condition 0( Uie industry.
and. their leaders h;we peti·
tioned legislators for help.
tha-t the film audieoce i.I · fE()Mll(Jl" ·A PMAIO.llll ltTUR£ young. Ahnost haU of those
1
'-_________ _,.
11
"Things have ne~ been
th i~ bad." remulced a
veteran labor leader. "We
rook salary cuts durinfr ttle
depression. but at least we
kept on m.a1ci ng pictures."
Much h.as been said and
written about the economic
stresses that have brought
about Hollywood's ills: the
rise of labor ooste. tM
crushing ov~ad m main·
taining the big studio plad.s.
foreign subsidies and lower
costs that cause f i I m
makers to shoot abroad. etc.
Such matters are not the en·
tire cauSt'.
Variety has reported on a
survey authoriud by !tie
Motion Picture A$$0Clation.
The report WM submitted t"
11!lsociatlon President Jack
who attend thea·ler~ are
between ttle ages (I( Iii and
24.
The 9t.artlillg part of Che
survey i8 the report that oo-
ly 25 millioo American.; Cati
be regarded a~ frpquent
moviegoeri;. That
repruents only lR pe-rccnt
oC the 138 milJion Amenrana
over 16. Tho!e 25 mlllioll
film f.aM each l'rr Ml
average of 39 picturr~ a
year. .
The report indicatrd lhM.
d the remaining 113 million
Americmw fYVM 16 -
Forty~e million never ID
tJO the movies.
Seveoty-tw<> m1 Lhon .see an
~.aragie ol onJy 4.2 pictun1
per year.
Wbo are the most frequ ent
film goua? A~rdmi: to the
aurvey. molt or thf'm ••
young and single. f ilm It·
teodance falls pl't'C1J'llf0Ul l1
Wittt marriage aod 11ge, the
movie habit geMrally belDC
broken by ttte ~e of 2!l.
NOW W.....ofT•• Ac1 ... , A-4•
1..ow mus
IATUDAY a IUNO•T
.. Olfla 0-..• ,, 41
Wltll Ill•~ St•rll•~
., 111• •·"'·
'
11 ''mesa
,-\ \'. ,t i
~·WMPT '· HAPROP '\U Ml I
--THE
ADVOITURES OF A
StiAGGYtlTILE
BURROA"O
A BOYi
,!GB
·-~mr COlfflMUOUS S
TODA T & TUUO~
PIO"' I '·"'·
~:· .;.
WAIT UNTIL DANr
EDITH EVANS
AUl49111Y Aw.r4 N9111lnH
1 THE
WHISPERERS,
who &re they?
8RY .... f'I
FORBES'
Produr11ort "'
"THE
WHISPERERS"
EDITH EVANS
ERIC PORTMAN . ..._,,_.........,.
~ ........ -.L/J#'trr~owww••
Second Bit Hit
8181 ANDERSSON
INGMAR BERGMAN'S
p~
Ml •llCXltSSO. 'l./Y ~
-~-....... --
I
--------~-.......
TH£ LUXUltlOUS
NEW 1All9'
~S~T..:._H_:.EATRE
MOMI Of IOCICINe <IW~ l~b
I 70t WT IALIOA llYD. \ v.. mm P£NIJISUU. 113.m. ~
• CHllO WIYH P•HNT ONLY •
OAJL v PILOT II
Now Plcryint
At R991lar Price
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!
ALSO
• o I 1' .,
f 4 ,._ I ' ' \ \
Held Over
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION
Best Actress-Audrey Hepburn
Whet d id they went with her?
AUDREY HEPBURN
ALAN
ARKIN
Rf CHAR CRENNA
WAITUUllL ....
Al10
.... EFREM zrMiA!~
Ge TIQ4NIC()t0fl" ""°"" ..... .,.,:...,..,...
~·
IXCLUSIVI AHA ltUN
$011th •f tho $en Dlefo
fffowey on '"ch
9t Main l lllla
Academy Award Nominations
BEST ACTOR-Rod Steiger
BEST PlCTURE
BEST FILM EDITING
BEST ACHIEVEMENT IN SOUND
..
··---=.r--=
..... -
-. -, . . . .. .
1• QAlLY PJLOT Mollday, April 13, 1%8
lRoUSfs Foit S1LE I Houses POR SAU HOUSES FOR sALE 'HOUSES FOR SALi I HOUSIS FOil SALi HOUsayoR SAL• MOUSU '°" SALi
L ' 100< Gene,.I tOOO 0.Mral 1000 o.n.1i'T 1GOO
, ~r•I 1800 'General 1000 General o..r.a 1• 0...-el
HOUSIS POI SAi.i HOUSIS FOR SALi
•• lOOO
tohn macnab • NEW HOMES • Onfy $19,950 TOP WATEIFIOllT LOTS wa .. e MIN DAILY 10-6 e 3 bedroom · 2 bath homt 1n n ffwflatfH
400 Wi11clw•1cl LA .. N.I. lovely Cotta Mesa. La"'r ......_ lllCICnalt ~ I II
.....
Oly .. lc Sbe , ...
HAUOR
HIGHLANDS
Upp•• ••v !vu. 4.5 u .. brlck flre11lace • E>tcel~t ..... .....,._11c
2Us.J2SO Ml· ft.+ J cer Uoor plan for g:rowiq fam-LISTINGS ne ~ IWW aad 9••· From U•,UO, 10 '4 c1... ily. At e.nd ot cukt.tac (Fee simple Jandy Water&ont Iota, lndudiq DCWll SHOalS thll home ~! ~42-tl21 6"6·114' •Yea. at:reet. Owner mli.lt aeU due boat allp1, floom Jlld1der IDllll .O Immediate-•VII')' llfllldOua bedroom&
A marwlcus wm!y home
with 5 ~ batroOmt
&ad c tlW batba. lAl'l'e
ldtcbeft with all modml ('Olloo
~ Tamil)' room
Joob onto huce·CIOVet'eltl*-
tio and ~ 18' x 40'
~ed and tlltered pool tar
thole wann IQDllDel' dil)'I.
All immACU}ate home In su-
pa e)esant condltloo In
Newport Beach's dlWtt area.
2,f50 Ill· ft. of sr-t family
liv:inr for oab' P,B. ilub-
mlt )QIZ' smeller borne ID
trade. Call today for an ap.
Pointment.
Tb" popular l&rae 4 8dnn,
2'~ both, blt·ln kitchen. lam
rm ""Mellott" built home.
Hdwd fJOOtl, new ca.rpetinct!
fN n LEVll to Ulneu. Better hurry! IN THE S33MI 11 5 .... tam m , dlDIDI ,.,. room. drum ldtchell .ll"UI Eve. 646-8%i9 • rm. C ta.ab IW# View bome. CGOl'dtnated c:aJ1)1Wdn11ft Sl*ldab arc:bltec:lwe. laqe lot at elMS of
-lmmac cood • . .. • • UT .!IOO
Call for Appt
642-1235
' Block from park & schl. 4
BR .. 21.; ba. 2800 Sq. ft., Jnrl
I buem't/famUy rm. $39,$0
~lta Real Estate 646-Hl.4 293 E. 17th St. Top AREA H...,...,_ H...._, Sale$ Corp. Ae1ddt sw.soo -i*.....cul_..~.:-~tot CALL DICK FABIAN -147-2511 O&n llMted .,._. •• """._ .. ...,... Ct.1l tor u; Appt. sc.rm
Call Mrs. PavlcMcb We will mall you lot maps
• finandna in~format1on. CLASSIFIED INDEX
Hours-Re9uletions-ueedtines
IRRORI: AdvertlM" ahould cheelc th••" adt oany and report lmmedl•tely errort
or ml11Cl ... lfloatlona. THE DAIL V Pl LOT a.-umee llablllty for errorw only to
,,.. ei1tent of publlahlng the •dvertlHment correctly one time
n!ADL.IN,E FOR COPY ANO KIL.LS: 5:30 P.M. the day before publlcatlon, except for
Weellend Edition and Monday eeetlon1 when cloelno ti,,,. 11 5:30 P M Friday.
"OU MUIT HAVE KILL NUMIERI Wiie" lillllng an ad bec.i1u1e of quiok retults.
be sure to make a ree4rd of the lclll number given vou by your 11d t11ker .n
verification of y'lu• call.
!very effort 11 mad• te klll or correct a new 1d that hH been ordered, but we ca"·
not vuarant.e to do IO untll th• •cl hH •ppearecl In the paper.
OIME·A·LINll Ade.,,. ltrletly cHh In advance Dy mall or at any on• of our office-.
NO phone orders.
DAILY PILOT reMrvet ti!. right to cl&Mlfy, edit, censor or refuse any adver·
tlMme,,t. and to dlange lu ratea and regulatlon1 without prior notlc:.. I
Advertl11r1 may place their 1d1 by telephone. j
DIAL DIRECT 642-5678
WESTMIN STER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220
Huntington BHch 540-1220 l1gun1 BHch 494-9466
Phones Ar• Open 8:00 a.m. -5:30 p.m.
CLAlllfrlED COUNTERI a,,. located 11 followt:
2211 W• ..,.... ..... ,. N_,.,t ..... JJO Wd '-Y S""9, C.... M-. J"
""' IMet, ,._,, ............ m ,.,,._ A,.._, L.,... 9-lt. l :JO.l:JO bce,t. s.t. l S.a.
Mall AddreM: lox 1115, Newport laach, Callf.
A ' ,.)
POPULATION EXPLOSION?
One of Mesa Vttde'1
largest homes will solve
the probltms ! This 5 bd-
rm, 3 bath. two story
Colonial Beauty II across from park and
school. Complete with
SVC porch. boat yard.
pantry, huee family
room and even an attic.
Over 3000 sq, In beaut!·
ful condltlon. Owner
uklng S45.500
ftlRF!CT ftOOL
HOMI
MP"'8 Verde corner lot
with plenty of privaty
and a home that is per-fect for a pool. F.uy ac-
cess lo bath and shower,
kitchen and f.amUy
room. Beautiful carpets
and drapes, quality ap.
polntments throughout
Prl~ below replacement
cost at $35.500
f'ACISITTIR-
$2', '50
llG LOTI
Ranch style four ~
room alnale story tn
Mesa Vt'l"ik. Many lro-provementa, cuJ-deotac
locatJon with view of
Uahts by ntlht. Alllon 113 aett. Prkled rilltt at-$38.~.
DINI• IOOM
Sln,gi• •toc7. .. "9rm. with fam.ll.J rocn1 .\ND
fonnaJ dlrdbt &Na. Large muter auJtt and ~ lot. A wb< of 1. blu' at 139,950
~ .
816 MW VERDE
wao&E
n us 3 BR home has an n·
pended famlly room. dlJ1lnr
room l larle living rtiom.
New carpets tbrottehout A
new!y painted. Located in
great raldentlal uea on
1.itl-dffle ltreet. Exatina
loan can be ..umed with-
out tntttett tncre.ae tor only
S2S tnnlter fen. m .. r;oo
JO-... co:Ts
~WALLACE
I RIAL TORS
546-4141-
(0,... lvenlngs)
ACTIVE NEW
BEAQI omCE
netdt ~meed SALISPEO,LI
ftellllea ltriedt
conftde:ntlll
Barr Whffe, Rultor
2901 Nftl'Ort Bl¥d.
Newport Bed
Uormerl7 A1't Kbtla Oftb)
675-4630
OPEN EVERY DAT
TllPU
1HE WH&l
OF FOITllE
MAGNIFICENT ne.w View
bome m the ~ IOcatioD
in Dover Sbora. 4 Bdrm,
Jar&e Soda1 rm, aweeplnc
View, ~ carpeted,
Ev•: 673-6316
dnpea, and Jandlcaped • • COM .. ANY .................... S129.SOO
OPEN SAT. RIALTOU
la sptnnlfti )'OUT qy, OwMr 1324 GALAXY DRIVE ) 61M400
la wining to aacrlft~ his DOVER SHORE& ALY~SSOO--
two money maJmg laundry. ""'"
mats In excellent COSTA BAYFRONT MOVES YOU IN -·~ nn."'.....,,... n'S" D .. ft,..,. MESA s.HOPPINGCENTER -... .. ~·~"' iu•~ LQCATIONS. Each bu 30 DOVER SHORES Fantaltic: Nt'W]>Ort Hdihts &16-7T11 Open Eves.
wuhen and 10 dryers NEW. Bdrm. 4 bath, powder ~~ 3 =.~~ E---c-•-• PLUS EXTRAS. A~ rm. dhdna rm, lu'ie SodaJ _,.. ..,__._
mately Sll,000 Groa income rm, PW l SUp. 6~" 6. ai.tom built • lnl -~ A la.r(e custam 3 Br home
annually, w 1 LL TRADE nancins • ~% DD. to qull-~~-~ STY~E for only $37,500 In Ne'R1IOl't
EQUITY FOR ~IDENCE fled buyer •• •• • · •• SllT,:!00 POOL a.uu.aR Beadl. 2000 Ill· feet ol OVft'-DUPLEX, OR CASH. Exe.~ OPEN SAT. ~ aiud bedroom.a, 2'.i ba'tbs.
tmt value tot ttlired couple 333 MORNING ST~ LANE OJuntry anno&pbere with two ma~t ftreplaca
wUlln to ~ only -fruit tTeea and fenced ~ and a large family room.
le of kir1 a day. :1::i CAMEO SHORES den am -3 Bedrooms and Only $3,750 down.
for ONLY W .500 each. OWNER MOVED. MUST BE everything In ti~top condl· Panoramic View SOLD! Beautiful spacious tJon. $25,250 Just 10% down.
Ocean View home. Large 646-7171 • 546-2313
oval paol. 4 Bdrm. lana.I, 5~ • OPEN EVF.S.
baths. Aaklng .. . • SllS,000
OPEN SAT.
4627 PERHAM DR.
HARBOR HIGHLANDS
THE POPULAR LARGE 4
Bdrm, 2% bath, bit-In ldtcb-
ea, fam rm "Mellott" built
home. Hdwd noon. new car·
pettnr. Im.mac cond •• $31,SOO
OPEN SAT.
2100 Highland
THE ~EAL
E~TATERS
6 Bl Plus
f 1mily Room
Vacallt It reedy. Beautiful
garden electric buUt·in kitcb-
Call for Appt. en, 3 be.Ula, lovely cold w/w
• -· -~;D--~--+-~~ YMd
with block wall. l..al'it 5~<'~
FHA loan -price $35,500
make oUer.
1093 Baker, C.M. 546--5440
I' \ l I.· \\ 111 I I
...... t:\H\\JI\\ ~~ flf \I I\ ( IJ
Corona del Mar
First time offer utilul·
1y d~elaped 47 f lot
aoutb of the hipva ..
pa.ricing problem he~. 4 bed·
room 3 be.th ho!lle with huge
master suite. Uke n e w
ape.rtmenl has 2 bedrooms,
uaed brick fireplace. drltt·
wood panelling and exposed
beam ceiling. Lu.ah land-
scaping iMToundl eech prJ.
vate patio. $64.500.
Colesworthy & Co.
"42-7777
19C>l Hatbor Blvd., C.M.
Open Eves.
Excellent Location
$450 Down
From the living room and
dining room ol thi1 large 4
BR borne with huge n.t.mpUS
room. See the be.y. ligbta and
Catalina Island. This JQne
it ldtaJ for the family and
entertaining. $49,900 with a
low down payment.
~~esPRINa ~ms .REALTY
••• "ANYTIME,.
1*11 Westcliff Drive
$7.00 TOT AL DOWN
N~DtNG-M:t
CLOSING COSTS
TO VETS
Better living in Smoi F'rH
area. 3 hu~ bedroonu, plus
family room, 2 depnt
baths. Caii>ets. D r a p e s.
Forced air he6ting. 2 car
garage. Nice patio and Bar-
S.Q. A STEAL. -=s:
COiTA MESA OFFICE
2629 Harbor Blvd.
54.5-94.91 Open till 9 PM
FtlONT ROW
ILl~FfS
Customized tor a couple with
discriminating Wte. Xtra
lge llv nn openin& on 15x35
terrace. Form/dlnlng rm w/
patio, $40,500.
Joe Oarkson
Colclwtll, Wtr & Co.
ll(IO ! , C:OHI HllllWtY Ntw-1 llte<JI, Ctllfornla Kl HUI Oil M ...
' ~ Here are 2 spacious bed·
rooms. ranch size panelled
living room. a brlght roomy !!..'!!!..."'!....•B•R•O•K•E•N-L•E•G•,-•1
kitchen featuring a break-
fast bar and forced air he<ll We were requested to show &
1hrouehout nu. won't last. home very late last night.
Sl.24 per month lncJudes tu-The broker slipped on a ba-
es and Insurance. nana peal & broke hla leg.
--------
leach Home
+ Income
LIDO SANDS
3 Bdrms, 2 Baths
$23,500
WilllaJlllOll, R.ltr.
OPEN EVES.
2043 WESTC.lfT DRIVE
648.. 7711 Open Eves.
COWGE PARK
3 BR 2 baths, FA httt, fire-
place, built-in electric R .l
O. aJao re.trtgerator. car·
peta, drapes. A-1 condition.
Olotce location. m.soo.
Wellt-McCardle Rltra.
1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
~1729 Evu. 644-0684
We are trying to ahow you
we really work. Lockhart
Rily 846-3322, 646-2301
Newport Beach
Realty
Irvine Terrace Darlinl
3 + Fam rm • view -
lmm1culate -$42,960
67'>1642 · Eves. 5'6-1211
Cost• Mn. 1100
Pilcib Yb HEE
Immaculate 4 bedroom, l~
batha, family room. carpeta
A drapes throughout. Com-
pletely landscaped. Near
JCbool $29,500 Open House
Sat-Sun 11..S PM or phone
642-1904 for appointment. m
Ulac lane, C.M. Immerl
. -... -I
.....
....
me
Ort
·~ hs,
tel
1111.
G y
ee
us
nt
s.
ll
:r·
M
ii
:h
"8
15
•/
••
a
u
t
I
HOUSES POI SAL.I HOUSH FOi SALi _jklNTALS l lNTALS -l lNTALS llNTALS ;z;;-y_. 1 tto .._ .. ,..._ IMdt 1;,i~ _Unfurnhhed . ~ Pumllhetl Aph. Unfv........, .,.._ Unfvrftllhed
RUL I STATI
GentraJ
IWlV "1.0T
OW1fD i.wbll area. M;; $Soo O~ Cott ... ,C .... M.M 1100 Co. .. ~ 4100 _c..te __ MIM ____ s_100_ Coron• del Mar ~ 6550 Offl• Rental 6070 B"'. o,,.rtvnltl• 6300 _.....__....._ ___ _
BABYSft'TtNG DU' bome on Q11 alee .._ Ve:rdc pool 3 bedtooma, 2 baths. lM.na 3 BR l"' MIM with new $22 50 Wk. Up
halM _. Soll count. M-room With Romutlo F\r6. ~. b.U caa t.lllt·tN. • FAIRWAY
YIUA Am.
* Clluael Reef * LAGUNA BEACH luy Nw for Summet •lc!1 bull. 1:1« 1uncbea.
Delk .,aCM avaU.b1e Ill Toy 1ibop on B&lbo. 1*. leaoed yard C.11. 6tNl1I sama _. FKA•VA 1oaJ?.. 3 place. BeauU!Dl ldtcbm I.tree lot. Will r«it at $170 •Studio • ~ .pea
actl'CIOIDS -.....,, roou.. 2 Jotted air beatlni..2 car s~ per monaa "' _,. Ofdoq • bad Ud\a • ,.._ ~.
ktbL NO ~ cir qe, bAce mcloled yard, with S500 o0don mooq, •Maid llrfkie ·TV 1va.O.
poW1. tm:Ded!a .. oecupan.. a:r•t IOI' child.rta. Ownen Aaeot 54&-0.41 e N.,., cale • Bar
APARTMENTS
SP!lcrAC\11.A.R VIEW
WaterttcDVLoc • Boat
Sl(pl Ava.DUle
neweat oWc. bulldlnc •• JAtablilhtd JO ~
prime loc:iauan In downtown Larana 8eacb. Mr cond~ IJ I I IJt
q . ~ aety. 54B-1'112 movtq very IOOD. Try S500 a BORM EAST S.JDE ~ N...,..c lll9d. ~
cambrtdle model. 1900 Ill· Dow\\. pa,ymeot .. than Farm din.,.,~ Uv SUS CASITAS 3 IR APTS
POOL
tloned, carpeted, btlutltul l/Valk•r
paneled putjtSonlq. T w 0 ltlALTY
a.: S D.. l'tl BL, ~'d' rent. rm. 6 *a.it.. lqut yd, New Ubltl Jfow Jttntinc
em. ,.k '-! 411 trtr. lb ~ 1111 dtcor, Lia $225 mo. Fumllhed Beebelor l
2 BR -2 Batb ~
LEASE ·or -BUY
$420. Mo. 6 up • ~ QP
enlnlleta: ~ laada to -""""' .._ .,,,., M\lnlcfp&l Pllfttlll Jots. $50 Y til'_,,, ,,_..1 ..... , eYU.
Pt'I' monda ... 1111ce. Add THRIVING Ava11t Gard N~
$5 tor desk and chain. Add vell:Y boutique. Prime lcc:a-
$10 tor bustne.. hours an-tlon Balboa Island. Aaldq
swerlns llef\'lce. All utilltlea $8200. 61S-U40, evea '15-1038
NP .,..._ N .. wl w ~ IC-l4'T 1 lldrm Uldts 514~ Sou. BY o'"11tr. I;:;:;========:; Medal,.-...., a--
ADULTS ONLY 25.25 ~an Blvd., CdM
..., IM 50-195.) Me511 VercS. Jl JO .._. v, ...._ -mo Newpe11 Btvo.
8T3-1788 -for turtber Into
Mah...,. Mrs. C1rttn Herman Trott, Mir·
BYOWNER. 4 Bdnns. 2 nm EDINGER 3 lJdrm 2 ba fenced yd ATl'R. 2 s it: upsWn; w7w
battw, tam c';:~': 142-4455 OPEN EVES. paUo, 0
cpt1, drp.. .,11.111s: cptlns, drapes: new tum. dalrnbt.:..,~ c'r I BEAQI NORTH Le&ae $195 ~ Good loc. lU4.5G. 0'4 .. r
1~-!!!""~-!lll!'!!!!!l~J~_!!!_!!_~-~~!&!!!I!' 20l22 Santa Ane A¥e. Modern dtluxe •Ir.
peld exeePt t~lephone.
DAILY PILOT Mortgages, T .D.'s ~5
546-82~ 2~ Nthl, yeen INK, 222 FOREST AVENUE
yard. .-..-. o 1 n. 4 SR, 2" BA, 2-atory. 5 -========= child OK. 56-3Ml. Or we
S4H3N llWJUIH to beach. FamilY Newport a.ach 3200 SB ~e S.
available Ju.ne 15th.
Ask for Mr. or Mrs. White.
m.3a. m.cno
LAGUNA BEACH $556S ~1 Trull Ottd payable
494-9466 $55.65 mo. including 3~ on
Ne• port IMch 12 ..
Fun fw the feml)y oeu 3 8drm. s •~borne.
twim pool A ttanil eourt
1 block to ocd.I\. S23.SOO
PmU PIO mo. ~ River.
R. C. GREER. ~ally
34.16 Via Udo • 673-9300
Nil Bay A ocean; lo•e'Y 3
BR 2 Ba home on 2 Iota:
.:aa u.e u 2 apta. Rm. to
bid. $46.50>. Sell all or ~
tnt ar tncte. 1%1 '11t St., cu
park in rear Owner rn-rn9
4 BDRM. 2 bath, 5 yr Oia.
Club prMJe,u. Bfft offer
buy•. urse11t Sale! '28.000
Opef1 HOUM Sit A Sun at
351 rind St. 675-0144.
646-rul. 547-7401
s ~RGE Bdnn&; Iv an
Wells built. 3200 Sq. Ft.
Many extru. AaUme Ml~
loa.o. ~.000. 2100 Windward
Lane. OWNER 646-2!28
oc:EAN1'RONT DUPLEX
1 unit new. JM,900.
Submit down. Prepd lnt OK..
~ w1aty1. 673"8 eves.
IMMAC. 3 BR 2 Ba .• blt-inl,
cpl.I., drpa •• tri>l. Lg. bricll ·-ps'Jo:·~..$29~ ..
613-.oc50. 548-3196
PARK UDO 3 bdrm Con<»'
minlum, chldrn area at pool
$29,960. By Owner.
(213)~
ENCHANTING Bay view; 3
BR. 2 Ba .. all elcc., 2 sty.
deeded t 'nhoUH; 2,000 IQ ft
Cil.refree Uv., w/poola, etc.
Now $39.500 673-4356
BA YCREST 3 BR, 2 BA, fam
nn. 5~% In. 1935 Commo-
dore Rd. Owner. 54&-<mS
548-()970.
WATERFRONT 62 Balboa
C?1es 3 BR. $75.000. WW
conr.1der trade. U 3-mt
1210 Newport Hgt1. ---WTSIDf SPEOAl
room, dlJUog room. 2 car -:-·-• --1-1,...,.-,-w .. t..Jtff.-=-=D-r-. -amaJI level oceanvlew loe.
.. ~11 AU due 3 yrs, 10~ cl.1tlcowlt
----. -
HAliOR prap. ilec. blt·lnL Ce-For L .... $300. per mo. U40 AT T RAC T I v E.
me"lt driveway, block wall, with option te buy, 3 spacious, 2 bdrm. la r I e
fenced yard. Nicely land-BR coM.mlnlum In the ratio, pr, adults, no pets.
=========-Prime loc tor Corp Ofc's 494-1137
3llXI Ml ft Wal/pan'!, Pvt _A_N_N_,O,_,.U..,.,.N_C.,...,EM~E=N""'TS
Otes. Crptll., Drps. air-<:ond. d NOTICES GREENS DELUXE. Waterfront 3 BR ..
5355
.caped. Fonner mode.I lllrffl. Col 644-l OOt ()pell 2234-A f!utal!'l'I Dr· 2 be., carp.. clllJI., bltns, Gmd fir. low rent. Al.SO: an
home. $37.000. Call owner ---------BACHELOR: SPAl'fous w ~ aft 6 p.m .. an,ytime 4 BR 2 ba boue; Back Ba.y No pet&. $125 mo.
weekends. are:i: 1265 Month. Carpets, I>e,lollt req. 1975
BAarn.oR • UNFUR.N. w a • h e r I d r y e r : doek from $100 w/bo&t tie-up privil. Adults
Luxury SUlte 70011400 sq ft. Found (Free Ads) 6-400
Co-op Biers. Owner ~9586
---2-1-450--drapes. ~ PARSONS, Apt. 9. S Incl. ulU.
' u;;lveraity Perk 3237 E'SlDE 2 BR. Elec bltna, 1 -2 le 3 BDRM.
patio, 1arap. Adults onty. roJUif Ii UNnntN
GI APPRAISED UNIVERSITY PARK 361..B Osle U3S mo. Heated Pools, a.Jld Care Fixer • upper 3 BR, tam. 642-1291 rm w/frplc;. Need& aome 2 BR. 2 batba, blt-ln 1VO le Center, Adj. to Sboppin& -
paint Owner's parchased dl&bwuher. Quick pou. $235 $00 to $80 Apt. UtiJ pelct. 2700 Peflmon w.,. at HU'
uc to ..,,, H Trl Utfl ...i. bor A Adams, Coeta Mua. new home mo. on 1 yr lease. .,.... _., ""
only. Yrly. lease $300 Mo.
<Grind Canal &oc.) Owner
673--0'207
2 ldnn Unfurn
& Bachelor 11.aSHE .. R RE .. LTY 1 man. 56-1.551an1 pm 546-0070 B~ " " '!!!!!~!!! Utillties Included. 847-853'1 963-1178 3 BR, 2 ba. frplc, carpets, Ir N~U Palms 1 Ir 2 .l:IR .. Near sbopplna. U OO SQUARE FEET-drapes, all elec kitchen. Furn or Uni $l.1S-$1SO. Htd Adulu Only 802 Knoxville. Apt. D. HB
Sl!M dn lnchJding aJI costs. BRANO NEW. lmmed poa. pool ITT E. %2nd St. 64Z-364S Dh1crlmlnalivP Tenanta SJS.2914
Move Into this Ir 3 BR 2 ba $250 per mp. $140; UTtL. paid; lovely 2 for Preatile Addreas FOR rrnt 2 BR unf. apt.
,.. cul ....... I t -Btt; block b> K-Ma:rt. 571
Large Ir small. One lllith
LIVING QUARTERS
646-7130
lndust. Space 746 W. 17lh
Costa Mesa 3600 1q rt
Owner (213) 434-5082
NEW M-1. Rent fiOO' S70 mo.
2944 R.tndolph, Coeta Mesa
67~U6
Lota 6100
hovme o~ .. cd ~ c~ii 4 BR. 2~ ba. 2 b'plcs. LOTS Joann. 646--2311 54&--0787 MARTINl"'UE Spilt level, l~ ba, cpl, drps, ~.,-, ~tiO, tn • of closet Ii storage space. T dawsher, d.ilp, all elec., OWNER
9" · n Ideal Joe. on Cul de Sac st. Betboa 4300 GARDEN Am. ='di. enctAdd~~'" ~ooee ~ DESPERATE
1llage Real Estate Leue 1 or 2 yrs. or will -------5.16-3190 MUST SELL lee.le/option at S265 mo. CLEAN Bacbelor ~ Parld.Ure IWTOUl1dil'lp
9624471 ~03
TWO FOR THE aA Y & BEACH
PRICE OF ONE HIT ~~Hwy
Nlce 2 BR home, tretbly •
painted + a rmtal cm the Corona del Mar
baclc of the lot. Priced Lor 67>m> Eve 6 Sun BJl.01.0l
fut sale at SU,500.
'f'r?IOI J"MW°Rdfi'j "1-1
847-1266 Eves. 842-5844
?-5 Bedrm, 3 baths, drapes, Boat or Trailer carpets, a11 e1ect. blt-tna.
Lovely comer with breeu-Fenced. Av&ll. immcd. $295.
way 3 BR + l~ beth. Any 546-6846
type financing. =========
Haffdal Realty Lido Isle 3351
"HMMs to Match Income" LOVELY 3 bdrm, C{>tJ. drpa,
8740 Wamer 842-4400 blt-lni., So. patio, lease SZ75
Owner: 4 br, 2 ba., landacp., mo. 673-4063
All utll tnc:l $'15 up FURNISHED BACHELOR! NEW l bdrm apt, Irpl. ww Dana Point * A comer com·
315 E. Balboa Blvd. tJNFURN 1 BR . 2 BR . S BR cpts, a~oce.do bit-Ina, dl"p6, mercial lot on Pacific Coest
BALBOA m-9945 2 bethl available pvt patio I: yd, pr. $125 Hwy. ctn:wnatan~s ~
Carpets. drapee, pran _M_T~-------mand aaJe or this choice
Huntlngten a.ch 4400 11th & Senta Ana CM. 2 Ir 3 Bdrm 2 ba Pool. property at once. Will take 646-4233 ~ .Patia. M 0 R A KAI, 8181 reasonable down payment
Roam.I A AIQ for Rent !!!!!!!!!!!!!!IB!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!P!!!!!!!!!!!!'I Garfield .. PTI 1treet t blk and carTY T.D. Write Dally Dy, wk, mo. ~ 1 I: 2 BR --_.N ... t1.1A Pil >tt ~titlrtJctt·tm.-..~•-1etmiff Yltfap" ~··~~..,..,_~.....,~~~liiiii~tii· iJmjli-m
COMPASS MOTEL Santa Ani 5620 HarCr Blvd. ArH
US. 11th St., H.B. 536-4170 Spac 2 Ir 3 BR, l~ baths ---------so x 175 lot
Laguna Beech 4705
NEWLY tumlshed 3 bdrm.
2~ bath, all electric built
Ins. Panonmic v!ew over-
looking AlllO Beach. $220
21621 Wesley Dr., 499-3755
Carpeta, drapes & POOL! VOLT Al RE plus amall rental
Near shopping Ii schools. FROM $99.50 US.000
From $110. Lge t BR, 2 BR, Studios George WilllamlOn, Rltr.
Mgr. 2214 College #2 Holpoint bltmr, refrig, 673-4350 OPEN EVES.
NEWLY PAINTED cpts, drps, pvt petlo.
pool, recree. tlon area. 2 BR w/gar • fenced, priv. 811 S. F~rview Rd. 547-7485
trpl, Xlnt achls. $24,500. --======== RENTALS 54~ aft Sor wkenda NtwPort West 3375 Aph. Unfurnished
G=~~~~=~· t84!twn McFadden &t ht St.)
2228 "B" Placentia Av. SlOO
Please look & then call Ltguna BHch 5705
PARTIAL Ocean v I e w ;
Corona del Mar. Choice
o'liiie lot NOT leuebold.
Lovely treea. 6 7 3 • 2 O 1 0
Realtor
Fountain Valley 1•10 BEAUT 3 br .. 2 be, crplJ.
-----drapes, Until Sept. bt. General 5000 Super Sharp Walle to beach. $195. 962-3886 -------
537-0380 ---$110
LCYI', frtt It clear, In Port
Charlotte, Florida; &ell or
trade. 64&-1447 aft 7 pm.
f'OUND . Siamese male ca t.
Vic. Carlleld & Bushard
Huntington Beach 962-8907
~ 4/16
LONGINES MAN'S WATCH.
lnacriptlon identifies at the
Newport BelM:tl Police ala·
tlon.
FOUND near Maytalr Mkt ..
Costa MeM. Glaue1 In
black Cale. 646-9293
BLACK le White male cal
Black spot on nose vie
Wt1tclltf 646-1849
SMAU.. wbJte poodle •k
north Mesa Verde off Gisler
~293
MALE While cat. Vic of
Corona del M.ar. 673-&309
Lost 6401
BLACK Labndor Male aUp
cha.in cbollar. Vic 16th Pl Ir
Tustin Ave. C.M. Friday.
Valuable re. dog. Reward.
1,~_jil.=..fJ_OJ~·
m-4510
LOST Small white poodle
Colt.a Mesa Park. Name
"Pepe" Rew a rd .
Heartbro ken Mr 1.
Gusta!10n. 548-5749 or 690
W. 18th St.
LOOT Sunday morn ln g
Slameae aultered male c&t
new to nelg:bborbood Harbor
Hills arH, CdM. Reward.
6i4-2333
DARK Brown fem a le
Burmese cat, declawed.
Lolt vt~th I. Bay' Balboa. Family heartbroken. Rwd.
675-5136
Ofolightful. clean 3 bedroom -Huntington ~400 This home could be a model ___ _ __
All modem convenienct• • FrM Rental Book VEN DOME
2 nice bedrooms, upstaln.
1 ~ baths, carpets, drapes.
Private patio, &ar•ge.
WALLACE AVE. VTU..AS
2061-D Wallace Ave., CM
100 CLIFF DRIVE
LUXURY FURN/UNFURN
Yearly Lease. 1 A 2 BR
steps to Shore Ir Sbopa
Oceanvtew from ~ery Apt.
from Sl60 mo up.
494-UU
SMALL whl~ poodle. vie
---------Bolla Ollca, Ed I n' er.
Ranch .. 6150
On quiet cul.de-sac street, Drop In and Browse
Rreat ror chD~ Extra 4 Bedroom. 2 Bath Glen Mar
1 a r g e lot . With covered Immaculate. Fenced Yanl.
screened pat10. SZ15.00 Mo. Available In ~27,300 June. ~5169 WALKER A LEE
SPECIAL!
2 WKS FREE RENT
Make reservations NOW
Newly Redecorated
Close to thoppln9, Parle
Boys Club & Glrls Club
(just south of Hamilton SU 0 p . t 5740 2 BR wlramge le retrlg. _..,_, __ o_in ____ _
Lockabl~ garal(e. 1 or 2 CHARMING. ocn vw. Lite. 2
children welcome. Nr. 19th & Bil, new cpta. drps. Adult.a.
Anaheim. Sl05. 642&11 $150. Agent. 49+-~
Reward. HH.rtbroken fami-
ly. 847--6660
LOST: sold clau rtni; al.JO
star &apphire rln& w/3
diamonds. Balboa l 1 .
Reward 673-2416
LOOT grey, black It wbJte
ALL 'TYPES itil • I 0 D ' 7 ' Brick, Bl.oclt, Cenumt work.
Abo repUrs. All type& Cai'
pentry • Roofinr. 636-2916.
BRICK. Concrete, ~
try Olaom Cablneb. Small Job6. OK Free Eat~
!NO JOB TOO SMAW
Realdential -Iodustrlal Com-
merdal -M a h1 te n 1 n c e
R.epalr Ir Remodel
Reuonable. Ur, bonded. !1i·
IUJ'~.
• !J62..1961 or ~ •
REPAIRS* ALTERATIONS
CABINETS. Any size JOb.
23 Y ra exper. S48-8Tl3
• Carpentry • Cabinet.a • e Bit-int e Alterations e e RepaJ.ra e Reu! 646-9l5SS
CARPENTERING Ir Roo&-1.nc. All types • All wad;
l\llU'lllteed. 5J9.6129
Cement, Concrete 6600
CONCRETE, Block, Spanish
tile, W1'0Uibt Iron, wood 4'
alum. patio roots. LiceNed.
547-5320
CONCRETE, block, Spultb
tile, wrought Iron, wood 6
alum. patio roola. l..Jcemed.
547-5.120
e <X>NCR.ETE WORK e
Of All Types. No job too
Small. Call: 192-llDI
CUSTOM PATial It
B1oclc walls. Abo coacret.
Awing A mDOYal. IU-1010
CEMENT Work of any kind
at lowest prices. Cuar. wortJnanahip. !fAt, __
CEMENT work, all fnel,
So job too 1mall. F?ff est.
H. STUFLICX 5'W6l5
THORYK CONCRETE
NO JOB TOO SMAIL
Free eat. &46-1234/675-5Sll
Contrecton 6620
e ROOM ADDmONS e
L. T. Comtruction
Family rooms, kitchen or
units. Single 1tory or 2;
plans custom dellgned. For
lltimatea Ir-layout, pbone:
• 847-1511 .
Additiona * Remodelbll
Fred H. Gerwick, Lie.
673-604.1 * 649--%170
TOM CARNEY, Bldr. lS yn
exp. New constr, nn •dd.
gen malnt, xlnt wk. 673-2473
LICENSED Contractor. Ad-
dltiona. Remodellnit. Sm
Jobi Specialty. 673-2129 Only $'100 total down pay·
ment. 6% Int., $124 month
Includes all -no loan points
to pay. U7.9SO ruJI price.
This older 2 BR 1 beth
home 11 C<YZ:Y It tnvest.ment
wiae. LOCKHART REALTY
7682 Edinger
84~ Open EvPs. • Specious 3 Br's · 2 Ba
• Swim Pool · Put/green
LG E. Deluxe, quiet 2 BR H~
br.. Adults. Eutalde 240 16th Rentals W1nted 5990
2 -4 or 6 Acre1 of Industrial
property cloae to Rlver1lde
Freeway in Anaheim. Will
exchange for improved com·
mercial or lndustrl11l prop.
erty with long term leases.
For more Information call ..
. . Walter F rick
Eckhoff and Assoc. Inc.
1818 W. Olapman Ave.
cat with crooked e a r · Cer-t Cleaning "FASS". 546-8437 ,.-6625
646-3322 646-2301 ---:--
LEASE; 3 BR., carp .. drps.,
293 E. 17th St. 64fr4494 bit~.; walk to tchools le
=========1 •hopp!ng. U37 Mo.; Neer
Santa Ana 1620 Brookhurat I: Adams 963-
• Frpl lndivllndrY tac~
• Adults Ir Family areu
1 M5 Anaheim Ave.
C.M. 642-2824
t>.. 541H432 WANT 1 Bdrm Unfum apt. 2 Bdrm, cptJ, drps, bit-Ins. including garage or carport
mrlg avail, $115 m o up to $100 mo. Costa Mesa.
962-3055 C.dM, Llguna Beach, etc.
Orange, Calif.
541-2621, Ev..-wkndl 538-5747
Grey & wh kitten, Orange le e WALL TO WAU.. e
Santa l11bel, CM. One blue, e CARPET CLEANING e
one green eye. 646-4038 BIG Discount! 646-nBO
~---------------7!(11 SWIM, U•e and enjoy our -=========
Newport Heights Special
U9,995 1!!1!!!!!!11!!!!!!1!!!!!!1!!!!!!1!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 1 bdrm, trpl, patio, $1lS util For e m p Io y e d lady.
RENT
REAL ESTATE
General
6-iOS Electrlcal
2 bedrooms + out.side guest
room. 11' block to Newport
High.
Jean Smith Realtor
sharp 4 Bedroom modem Huntington
home. 18 x 38 heated pool Harbour 3405
with slide. U63. mo. 5% % ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;,
FHA. $23,750. 531--0310
3 Roomt Furniture
646-3255 ~-~-=-==-~.;:::=-=-~-;::;::::;::=:=. WATERFRONT
HOME
$25 Month
FULL OPTION TO BUY
No dwnsll n.1.c. WHEN Have you seen in Npt
JlKts 4 BR, 2 ba frpl. for
$21,600! Can be seen
anytime Owner. 7315 Holly
Ln., NB. _
A VAIL Im med. Clff Haven
3 Br. 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean
Vu Inc Apt. $49.SOO. 548-7249
1240
BY Owntt -4 yr old 2 story
colonial style home, 2500 sq
ft. 5 Bedrm, 3 baths,
carpets. drapes, elec bit-Ins.
Fenced -landscaped. S37.900
Terms flexible. 546-6846
Corona cNI Mar 1250
JU.NESS FORCES SALE
Deluxe Home It Income
Cu.atom-bit. en new elcc
dream kitchen, new appllll·
n~. w/w crpt1 plul 2 lovely
f\Jm Apt.. For det111ls:
RlchtlrdJon/Purctll
~ty ~
lleclwcecl $3,000
.
3 Hse on ~ ac-Horses I: 3 BR 2 balh, private dock.
Inc. Total rent lnr $4400 Jmmed. occupancy. Lease
yrly. $39,500· 543-7249, 548-at S43S/mo. Bkr. Call Dick
4207 Fabian 847-2Sll
La9una._Beach 1705 FcMmtafn Valley ~10
nrE COUNTRY
GENn.EMAN
will be right at home In
thi~ rarly California styled
$190 Townhouse; 4 BR., 1 ~
ba., pool. frplc.. dbl. ga.r.,
carp., drapu; 962-1921
H.F.R.C.
Furniture Rent1ls
517 W. 19th, C.M. 548-1454
Sliver Gate Apts.
3 Br, 3 be, n~ly deconled,
unfumiJhed.
Abo 1 Br fum apt Walk to
.Elflnentary. Jr HJ, Hi Sdl1
& OCC. AllO Bach Apt.
988 EJ C.amlno, Apt l, CM
h'lnie with olde Spanish lnOuence. Niguel 1ectlon of Laguna Beach 3705 Coste Mesa 5100
LAguna. 3 BR. form/liv nn. Rent.ls Available Maple Capri
$%>.500 -S2500 Do. Sl50 mo. SPAC 2 Ir 3 BR, 1~ bat.bl Mission Rlty 494-0731 Apta le houset -all pr1ce Cp"" A~ 2 •· w ed ddltlo al ... .... .... poo .. SEE THTS. Cust(;°m-buUt ranges. e ne a n Near shp'Jt and l<'h.oola
rental• 1t pro(>t'l'fy 11st1ng1. FROM $-50 charm borne near n,w. CUSTOMERS WAITING .,.,,
Grand ocean view. 2 BR. 2 Beckwith Rlty LAl\llla Bch Mar. 1998 Maple. #3
BA. Many built-ins + kit. 671 S Co st H 494-7508 -Silver G.t.Apt~ $45.000. See owner. 30721 · · 1 W'J.
Driftwood, So. Laguna. 499-RENTAL S DLX Bach Apt. w/llv rm Bdrm kitchen & bll. 1 & 3118. Apts. Furnished 2 BR Apts. 3 BR Apl ... 13
W VELY O<'EAN VTEW -~ be. Nr schla Ir "-"us in waJ_k. Cost• Mesa 4100 '"' Lan11 i patio. used hrlclc. lrpl Ing dist of OCC.
3 BDRMS. 2 BA. $43.900 BAOiLR Apt, cpta, drpa, bit-988 El Camino, Apt. 1. CM
Call 496-1243 brtwn 1B.5 pm Ins. Sll9 uttl pd. 2652 Orani~. SEE now: avail. May lit
LOVELY OCEAN VIEW Apt A 646-6856 Modern, 'l>IC· 1 A 2 BR .•
3 BR 2 Ba. tpl .. decks. patlo. 1 a, 2 BDRMS Furn. gara&e downltaln; walk to Hartor
$33,800. Owner, ~ A laundry. adulta. 687 Vic-Sbopptna. SIS to $99.50. ~
paid. 2652 Oranae, Apt A 64.2--0086 after 5:30 p.m. or
64H856 wlcnda. 6200 WANTED June l5 on long AcrHge
Newport BHch 5200 term lease, 3 BR bouae, -,
0
_......S_EJTlf __ l:f_T_A_n:_
-C.d.M. Give loving care. u '' 2 BR. Bay Front apt. Beau-Xlm ref. 549-1010
t:lfuUy decorated, lmm11C'U· · ----
late. 4th fl'r, Vtsl.a del Lido. Youns, single employed man, 2 1 /] ACRES
Util. rum. $500 per mo. seeka quiet 1 BR apt., near
Yearly, lease. AvaJJ. Imme-beach. Aft 5 PM, If toll. call
diately. No pell. No chlldren <.'OUect. 213:28().1610 VACANT lAND
under 16. 646-1522 or 50-4690 WANT lnexpenslve winter 113 ACRES 1 1 home from Sept to June 2 commerc • 2 BDRM, 1~ betb. Enclosed Beach rn-8s4s · zoned <C-2) on major thor-
garage. lnqu!n at 4133 Pa· s.ree. ougblare in Santa Ana. M~
trice Rd., Npt. Bch. Roo"" for Rent 5995 tel, apt.I., bulineas, trailer
park or other commercial W"tcliff 5230 s~G rm for working OK, or hold for future In-
SPLIT-LEVEL man. Priv home I: priv enlr crease In value when Bol.q
N'PT Bdl Teml.s C l u b
membersh\> for Ale. Moved
from area, $400. Raulaton,
8640 Dunaway, La Jolla,
Calif.
SA VE 1/3 on CU1Tent price
ol pertonal Balboa Bay Club
Membenhlp, incl. 1 11
t:r1Ullf er cos ta. (1) 493-4069
SINCERE ~Ueman, 35, like
to meet Jady 71-30; compan-
lombip. ~e photos.
Dally Pilot, Box M-86 .
ALCOHOLICS ~
Harbor Atta. Phone m..f1'24
P.O. Box 1223 Cotta Mesa.
Announcements 6410 2 BR H~ BA n•Uos swim By Mo. only $35. 1543 Ave. fully develops into 4-
, ' ..-' Onnse, C.M. lane blvd. Sewer line stub----------pool, drapes, w/w caii>ets. bed A I ~~ Bit-Ins. Avail May 1 548-6.'i15 COMFORTABLE room for at property. mp e worklzc man. Private en-water supply. Drive by 4717 FOR MUSIC LOVERS
Corona d•I Mar 5250 trance. 2028 Sant.a Ana Ave., w. Bolaa, Santa Ana, then * Edward Greft *
c.M. phone owner 542-9533. * Q . t.j, * •-------usn ST $12.50 UP wk W I kitchen 10 Acres. So. Calll. S8 Down, ~ .., $22.50 _, Studio Apt& 2384¥.i SS per mo., S795 full price. of Century Plaza, Palm ~bv Newport Blvd. CM 548-9755 L. Shewfelt, 326 W. 3td St.. Springs le the Elisa Ryan
· •rt• ROOM for working man L.A. Phone 713: 623-5102 Cotillions
w I ldtbcen prlv. $55 mo. lo ACRES, Kirby. Oregon OPENS Tues, Apr. 16
ON TEN ACRES Costa Mesa 642...m26 $850 Per Ac.; 29% Down for 2 WEEKS at the
t I 2 BR. Furn A Unlurn 54&-0747 Beyslde Inn, N.B. Frplcs I Prl/Patioe I Pools NlCE rm. Good loc. SSO.
Tennis • Contnt'l Bid.It. 9 With ldtch. prlv. $56. 543-6998 Ovt of Stet• Prop. 6201 hole Putt/GrteJ!. or 6'BCll98 (S.3 p.m.l ---!ICXI Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 REAL IST ATE,
!MacArthur•· Coat Hwyl Gonefel N~ f BR, 3 baths In
Harbor Vlew RlU.
$52,000
Delancy Real Estate m.mo
RENTALS tori&. 548-6138 3643, or aee 2256-B Maple. White elepbanllT DlJne..fl·l.lne Income Prof)9rtv 6000
HouMt Furnished -::;Cor=o::::n::::•::::4e=-=l=Ma=r==3::::250C::..1.::::oro=na=cM=l=Ma=r=::::3:::::2JOC=:;..o_ro.=n=a=d=e:::::I :::Ma=r==3:::::2:::50= For SalM Income units. to
NEW KINGMAN ADDmON
large lots. water, Power.
$695 full price. SlO down, $10
month, no Interest. Free ple-
turea. maps. Write Box 486.
Kinsman, ArlL
22! H -OCEAN V1EW
CAMIO SHORES
3 BR, l ckon. cutom built,
A-1 condition. 3,000 eq. ft.
Lido ltJe
224 VIA Udo l't\lrd and '125
Via Udo Nord. CAD 213:
934-«no 213: m-<1547
Dr1vt by e45 ~t l H&mtlngton Beech 2400
call Robert Nattrue Rltr.
&f.2-t• I 2 or 3 bdrm on the bNch.
-B-A Y-Vl-l:W--Own--k-!r' 4 BR'flni. Perm tenuC.. DO arnall dlllchn. s.-.oan fep. M.ut!r auite. M .m
~dn. 64W51' ICCN IAL~ _.-;.: ====== HOUMll Uftfurnlthed
L_1c1o_1_91e ____ l_H_f Coste Mesa JlOO
BR. ~ 5 BR Nord BQttont
pler A &Up. Mel'• a.t bQ1.
Owo1r ••• m-JMT
S@\\cil }A.-l& £trs
Solve a Simple Scrambled Word Pu.zzk for a Chuclc.lc
O:=;ro~::en_: ~
low to fo"" ICM e1,..i. worda.
ICAIPll I I I' I I
lllLID ' I I I
Costa ..... Ust:lng ran out. reduc:IJll price $GX>. Muat
aell .notr $35,950. By Owntt.
Trade tlt'lltY for cub or
trust deeda. 54~
HOim Ir INCOME
Excel ~/Invest oppty 4
Br NII A 10-2 Br 1 ~ N apts
2-yr 01•. Pool E/slde CM
Owner a1393 tve 49M'm
tn llflln11 location.
A Ir COllt; 2500+ 1<J ft.
Set at mt Newport Blvd.
C.. Mtsa
Oil PHONE
Mlt. WAID 64U4&4
Mount. & Dettrt 6210
5 ACRES -subdivision, SU·
vrr Valley -18 mil" Ea.st
oi Barstow. "Land d
Lakes". 80 man-DM1de lakn
in Itta. Alfalfa, flab ni>
Ina. recrutlonal, maey de-
vek>!A'nents In procreu.
Call CJllll'MJ' 847 440 an. I
p.m. Week~• anytime.
Aalc f Of' tee.
DREAM-C-1b_l_n -,-2_,",__ac-.
w1tb beeu. view. Sl2S down
.t only $30 !>e1' mo t1ltt1 It.
BRECK NOTT RLTY ~
6412
wmMINSTER
MEMORIAL PARK
Mortu1ry & Cemetery
Complete funerel1
from $245
Ce"'9hry lett
lus. Oppertvnltlee 6IOO from $130
~ Dldowmtnt cm..
A1\E YOU •n e!ect:rtcal ,... Ev~ in one bc9vtUUI ~T Yoo eeecl mel place meuw lem COllt. Offltt "-t1I 6070 J m • 111)\all eiec repair lbot>. No tnme Jll'Oblem .. -------dotnr • SoOd ~ Owner 1aot a.ch. w~ .u.n. calllb. dn.pn, •t-IDCMnc. C&D! l can help 5'1·1725 m.un
ELECI'RJCIAN, Ucenaed 6:
b o n d e d . Small jobs,
mainten. Ir repairs. 5'S.Si303
G.rdenlng 66IO
ANTHONY'S
Garden S.rviee
646-19 ...
Rea.I. monthly care. Prm-tnc. Landlcapq. El:p. boJI.
ticulturist. "Tender, JoviDa
care for Green Gardem''.
Lawn & Yard
Upkeep
rototil. p-ade. 54G-82Cl6
Japa,,... Gardener
Exper., complete yard
service. Free estim&ta
• 54Pr?B • ----MOW'inl • EdPlr • Gardenlna Sprinkler R.epd'
847.9558
MOWING, F.dlin1. vacalawn.
Gen'I cleanup. Haullng.
Odd jobs. * ~
EXPERT Japanese Garden-
er LndJc'ing, Clean~, Ma!D-
tenance. "MACK" 847-0132
J APANESE exp1r. landlCa))o
deanup a, ref\Jlar prde.
Ing. 6'2-5198 l1tft' 5
JAPANESE GARDENER
Maintenance by the mon1b.
Good refs. Elrper 541-T758
cut .l F.dle Lawn
Malntmance. Llce~
54&-40 • 5G-f570 aft 4 PM
EXPERIENCED Gardener * Landllcaptns • CeaDUl> * Reu. It Reliable. &a-HID
e JAP~E GARDENING
Se"1ce Cw1u1>. ~ ms. m-'7034 a1t ' p.m.
Genenl s.me11
UW, air -.rt. and utl11U• 1'0Cl make 1DOn17. $1.500 EZ !!!!!l~!!!!l!!!lllJ!ll~~~!!P ~ ~~.~ = >: tma. 524-5CSO Bkr. H RVICI OUtl CTOltY ~-.-...--~-~--
tlfta.Dta. ~*-tel ln JANITOR route. GR SU> •..i..-•ttt-.... .,. lnOlt ~t ... ot Stat boan. ~u. ()pp __..,... ... --
Costa I'll For Info S.. at F .P. l6!0. $tOll dn t12-0rT
1m-. AN Aft. GlFJ' Sbop for tale: llM
Suite E • caD ICo4S1S llMcll locadon. Muat .U.
JOU'f U. ...._. • u. m. I04IO
DAILY PllOI' WAHf ADii
M2"5f71
I -....------·-------............... ~.---______ -:"! ______ _
--:»
•
-· •n> -
--------
* * * * *
... .._ .-... . ·~~..... # • -....... 1 . •'-. -. -...
"'°'ICllJ, "P"' ,,, 1 'fCIO
iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;~JODEBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPlOYMINT J085 & llOLOYMIN1 JOU & IWLOYMINT JOU & IMPLOYMINT JOU & IMPLOYMINT
* Helo Wanted, MM 1200 Help Want.cf MN 1200 Help WlftMd, ._ 7200 ------------------
. . . ..
JOU A IWLOYMINT ' , .... .._Mell a
He t p Wem..11 Mell 7m HeJp WantM tw, W ......
No bperie11ce w....... 1• w.. ....
w..... 7550 7400 ... ...,. ... ______ ..._
PRODUCTION
TRAINEES
No experience necessary. 18 to 36 year•. High
school graduate. U you have the aptitude, we
will train you. Permanent employment. Ex-
oeUent opportunity for advancement.
INTERVIEWS MOH. THltU FRI.
ATIBlTIOll
YOUl6 Miii
11 .. u
WMddya Wantt Whtdcfyt Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
HA TURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Special Rate ' SPS Western
1f you've bfton retuaed em-
ployment beellwie you ftre
coo YOUlll. or have bad to
1ettle fO\' a l'Oldtion that
don not pe,y •ell. conalder
this rtn opportunity.
$3.33 hour.
S lines -5 time• -5 bucks
ltULU -AD Ml.Ill IHCLUDI
l-WllM "" 111w • .,.._ .,__., yov ••I'll i.. ".-.
2701 So. Harbor, Santa Ana
An equal opportunity employer
Thia week oor corporation
wiU employ a cionacieno-
loo.s younc man to help out
on a l\aJJ time buis In our
merchandi.si.nr department.
Work where youth ii an fd..
vantare. R«eive complete
tralninl and top pey 1¥ith
no pr'Oblem ol strikes. lay-
offs etx:. Excenent over-
nme opsiortunlty with un-
limited adYaoaement.
._YCWI ~ •"4/W ~ ~S llntt f1f •trtlll,.._
5-*>THINO l'Olt S/.L8 -UADU OHL YI
PHONE 642-5671
T• Place Your Trac&.r'1 Paradise Ad PRODUCTION
FOREMAN
DISHWASHER
Morning
Uruts Colla .Mesa 149.:io>
Exchange equity 8t c~ for
more Units. Fitzmoms
Realtor 673-9010
HAVE: Apple Valley, acre + 3 BR 1 ~ ba. trple., encl.
patio. zoned for bones.
Want:' Orange County prop
or 1.st TD 540.1400
$.5,000 1st Trust D-~-. -EX-,·
OiANGE for Jett model tar
or boat or ~ 61:>-0144 646-
Glll. 5-17 • 7101
~6S Ch;;-BelAtr ~ag-W
eng .. fact aJr. auto trans.
P S. R&H. $1950. WANT
small motor bl+<e or camp-
Pr for equity. !>J&.1131
TRADE: .i + fam rm .1-din
rm + dt'tached rumpus rm
wlplumbing for 4th bath.
Want: lot. units or small
house. Rltr. 54&5880 ---w ANT VAN CAMPER
EXCHANGE M-1 clf'M 105
x 125 M-1. Los Angeli's area
lor homt' in Beach area up
to S5.J,<XX> qualified buy~r
Corb1n/Martu1 Rltr1.
61.>-1662 Cabinet Shop
2nd Shift
APTS & Busi zoned vu. land
lor 75+units. San Juan Ca· -Apply-
Great opportunity for am·
bilious young mM. Apply In
person be1wee11 Zand S p.m
daily.
po 700· front. can divide 9 EXPLO~ Snack Shop lots. S81M eq. Trd TD. ~ KU(
Owner. 494-4$7. 4!»-<1653 2305 E. Coast Hwy.
For penonal Interview
Call Mr. Maltlon
~1113 betw W P.M.
•
SKIWD
Beaut. motor home C11mp-MOTORHOME CORP. Co rona del Mar ANO
er: w<1nl 1st or seasol'lf'd '.?n<1 UNSKILLED
To ·s: Orange County: or 4000 Campus Drive A9UA·AIRE MEN NEIDED NOW
. ~ Stte 111 J::nco Station. Newport 8 .. ch NEW DIVISION OF EAST· TO FILL VACANCIES (N
Faarvicw Rd. It Fii.ir Dr., ERN \1FG. FIRM NOW j NEW DEPARTMENT
CM HJRlNC. WE NEED 22 OPENlNGS DUE TO EX-
IA"avmg Statr. Tradt turn DISHWASHERS MEN TO TRAIN IN All PANSION IN OUR OR.-
Tnpll'x, 23' Cabin Crwser, DEPTS. NO EXPERIENCE ANGE COUNTY DIVISION.
or :i:r ttse trlr, for ra.r. NECF.S.5 .. AS WE TRAIN STARTING SALARY
tr.11ve.I trlr. trailerable boat, ' 18 or OLDER STARTING SALARY $120
NIGHT SHIFT $495 PER MO TD'11 or! 64&-761& • per week & up
'66 PACEMAKER Imperial, APPLY JN PERSON FOR INTERVIEW CALL IMM!DI.ATE EM PL 0 T-
2 BR Expando, liv. room. g.11 and 3-5 MON. & TUES. MENT FOR 'mOSE WHO
TRADE equity tor late mod· 547-0607 QUA LI 1' Y. COMPlEl'E
~aT. A.ck for Dick.~ REUBEN E. LEE BORED & :r,os~~ RA P-
Ntteetirtl
Must ba•e ~ ('allfamla
drivq ncnrd. APP'1
YILLOW CAI CO.
llS E. Hdl St.
Colla Mna
A«nt. '$,~• Trne To
~ lnvofcn and IUPPQrt
docmne'lt&. Wlll trtln to UR
JBM coded tape for D a t a
ProctaiJlr. ~ tiling,
knowledge of 10 uy ad.
Uaht typlnJ. (company peya
~ fee>
Fee po&ljima available.
BY APPOINTMENT
SCREENED
Personnel A .. ncy
901 ~ Dr., Newport Bdl.
642.7484 S4U020
Stat Typiat $325-
.A.ccurate typi1t with A-1 pu-
aonality to wortt In pleuant
arrounding.
Front Deale Cite $350
si.r,,, ne.t. ~-Wor1c In
pluab hotd with f.ltdnatinc
a~.
lkpr. (part tfme)
$2.SO Hour
ldeel position for ri&ht girl
Woric altemoons.
• UNIQUE • Plaeotmerit Ai'encY
1385 Parle, CM, 6*-ml.
-citRLFRIDAY--
For amall t"apidly eXJMndinr
ftrm. Varied dutis with ex-
celletlt opportunity to ad-
vance with company. No
ahortband. ~ matul1!
.,,..,,. $350.
ABILITIES UNLIMITED
Agency
<411 E. 17th St., Sutte 224
Coeta Men 642-1470
ACCOlllll&
Olll
Ont )'tar ~ \io. eounta P9Y11ble plu ability
to ~le~ Mder and
do .,.,. t1Pbc. ~
~ far voucberial and
bandllo& of purdiue Of'-
den. ~vobs and recelv
ers.
ATIJITIC
IESUIOI
CORPOUTIOtl
MJuUe Systema
Dlvltion
3333 "'"*' llvd. C.te M.e, C:...lf.
U.S.~ Required
Aneq\al~ty
errc>k>yer
Production Control
n.p.rtmeot. Ex·
perie~ pneral
office duties.
CA.l.L ()It APPLY
CU-VAL CO.
17th& .......... c..ta,.....
541.2201
All eq\l&l ~t)t
employer
Auht•t lookk .. per
Ase 25 ID 38. Experienced
In peyroll, 2 yean ~
ence account& receivable.
Type 515 wpm, rood refer-
ences req\11.rfd. To $2.50
hour.
Send letter or qualllicatfons
to H.M.f . P.O. Box 211S,
Newport Beach.
HEAD tt0mss
Apply Miu Huffm•n
How1rd Johnson's
2750 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
546-6592
Secretaries
Typists
Actg Clerks SECRETARY
Modml 2-airl oMce tn Cor·
ona del Mar. Immedl.ata
IMMEDIATE • • • Short.~ openfna nailable tor unu. Lene t • rm Ullpmel ... Santa Ana, New-part Beach u.Dy competent. lharp, ex-
perienced cir•. AeaAnt I: Costa Mea Areu phone penonality. Must be
newpon .
personnel
agency
833 DOVER DJUVZ
NEWPORT BUOl
60-3870
A cal ,_ .. au1lst•
.-t w..--.. wtH ......,...,. ..... ,.._ ......
TOUR C~NllNCL
WOMEN
P/C ..... ..,... .. , ...
.. $UO
Asa:illt the ~ of a
small. ltabHJ firm. (appli-
cant s>eYI fee>
CntoMet Senke
Te $500
Must ~ tel~e tech-
niques and ba~ an outp
ina pieulnt penooallty.
Type S5 _,,in. (applicant
pe.yl fee)
TrW W-C• lllpr.
To $475
Under ». plea.ae. to a.mt
a young Ointn>llu. (Cll>ID-
pa.ny Pll )II fee)
Morta.ti.. Secy.
To $475
Skill requ.il'tmenl!I -SH
80 wpm, l)"[ltf S5 wpm ac-
cwatdY. with abilttY lD
work with a mln1mmn ol
~-Marla!tillC or
aale9 ~ bels*l
( CXl'Dpll1l1 s-YS tee)
HA VE automatic '62 Qievy
P\clcup, 16. Boat. 3S hp mo-
tor &: trailer. 842·3"198
TRADE Dl.000 eqty 6 unit
ll!)t, LONG BEACH for resf.
dentiaJ Nl'Wport..Coeta M~ FRENCH REVIERA NICE, 151 E. Coast Highway JlR ED--1,.
FRAN c E C: ;:PT.;,;,AR.MJN~. ::;.On~..-:.G4---rlWlt.PQJ'IL.DJUCJ1--1--. _ '-nL\IR-IN -. s .... aL..a lllCT ·~~---EMPlOYERS txceptiona1 typl1t -at leut ~ -00 1111pm. No~.~~:.-. ......................... .---k>5eeref9F1----
area. eves
WILL Excbngl' 7 frtt It
dl'ar lotJ, clo&e-in ·Palm-
dale: $8500 value, FOR eq.
u"!l equity In local house or
income. ~12 eve.
V 'hat do you thtnJc of otr
'TRAOER'S PARADISE ..
Orop u. a card. Oaalfled
O~pt, P.O. Box lf15, Dail1 runt, Npt Sch, caw.
*
to beech, station, markf't.
Foe atud4"1lt or vaation.
$14.900. For al~ or l'X· =Jean Smith Realtor
2 BR dbl wide mobllt home,
cld.r, edult dpluxe J>IU'k
acrou from club house.
Want: dean E'side CM du-
plex. Prine. only 968-25~
* * * --·-· -SERVICE DIRECTORY
Income TllC 6740
Taxpayers Attn!!
From now 'til midnight
SlllVICI DIRECTORY
s..1,. 6960
Alteratlon~2.sus
N.st, 9CCOl'ab!. ~ yn. e.JCl).
April 15th, cur of:ftoe will be I .1.974 open from I a.m.-10 p.m. to _T_IL_E_,_c._r•_m_c __ v_·_
do your tax returns. No ll~
poinlment necessary, how-
ever, a call NOW will ,...
~rvt a tlmt' tor you.
20 yrs tax exptt with no mt.
fiJ ed returns or penalties 6'r
our clients. Sam. dill)' ~
vice.
Coast Blllineu Servto.
1670 Santa Ana Aft.
Suite E OT call eG-45.15
Smiley T II Senke
901 Dover, {Suite 20&) NB
18.!4 Pla~tl&. Costa Me99
2.t08 Mup.ret, Npt Bch
W. A. ~ULEY C P. A.
Free Est. Ftts &ttr966S
~ ,rw~ Fed. & State S9 &: $4
I Your hom4". Sftf~Prorl
J''2·1010, 646-9188, 54S-866I
' r·1 { FM!. & Stall' S9 A $4
I Your home Salr-Prof'l
!:';.~.3103 ~-8668 Ml-1010
* Verne, the nle Man * eu.t. work. Install & rpPalrs.
No job too am.all. Plaster
patch. Le1Jdng 1 h o w t r
repair. 847-1957 /846-0206
JOIS & EMPLOYMENT
Job Wanted, M9n 7000
Sldpper/Enidneer
Boat M.&lntenance. Full or
&St time. P. 0. Box 1041,
t .M. 548-3561
Ode and BuU!'r
White, Ait;e 29
494-91.23
Job Wanted, lady 7020
CARPET Cleaning. Floor
1trlpplng, Waxing. Walls.
Wlodow1 washed. 531·0067
DA YWORK • Local resident
Xlnt cl~. Respoiulbll'
8Hcb area $Z. Hr. 673-3661
I !rsunnce 6no Dom"tlc Help 7035
~\Lt: SAIN 77uri<X> or LIVE INS
I • "'.).~~I. t! intere-sled ln Employe?' pays fN'ft
I 1suranrr. George Byland ,\gf'l'lry
106 B E. 16th, S.A. 547.m!lS
I ,.ndsc~ping 6810 Chinrse • English • French
"A YNOR'S 1...ANDSCAPJNG PPnna.rrw?nt. exper. L1vr-1n
& l.ARDENING SERVICE Far E&st Ae.cy. 642-8703
Sr ate licf'nsed contrctr.
R s:drntlaJ . Commercial Help Wanted, Men 7200
F·e .. est·No joh too bi&!
lt9J..3."llll
·-.,,,rhanging
.,ii:ntin9 6150
INTERIOR & ext painting.
Prices 111.).'hed for apnng
dean · up Free est. 30 yr
t>Xp Call Chut'k al 548-5314
PAINTING -cny room $20.
·~·. UM! "Sinclair" palnta.
~leat work. Rd's 847-1358
FI RST CLASS P1JJ1ting ~
Pa~rbanging. FREE ES-
TIMATES. 50-3459
• PAINTING • lnterloT &
e:aeM«. R t f e r e n c e 1
~111onable. 894-3-108
• PAINTlNG • Interior Ir
Exterior. Free estlmatn .
RA'uooable rattt. 646-3015
INTER at Ext. PAINTING.
rMME.D. SERVICE. Loca.1
ttf f'REE est. 548-1627
VtTS Bondf'd Painting
Int or Ext. 10 )Tll In area
Re.I.I f'rtt Eal. 642-0411
LOCATION for de-..... tllit TV 1eb ,_·ct
.. .. ... ! "" "'...,,,..
REUBEN'S
& COCO'S
COOKS
In·
ln
YounCJ men
teretted
9rowinq orCJCln·
Exc•I· bation.
l•nt Insurance
plan & profit
..... IHJ. Please
apply in person
betw•• I Ir 4
P.M.
1555 w.
Adams,
Costa Mesa
.._. Diii MHrZt .,.. , __ .... aww ___ 1:_m ___ _
Position • . • OVERLOAD pbone. Age 21 to 40. U quaJ. $450
of watching TV ~es betwftrl
6 It 10 P.M. &: would ratf)tr
work & earn a weekly u l
ary of
ORANGE COUNTY DIV.
roe inlbrmation call
Mond1y Ir Tuellday n4-ns1
O>me In or c:aU ue todaor. tfled, call 673-7688 Under 25. pleue, 11o wodc
BARTENDER
R.l'liable. elCpcrirn('t'd.
Part & full timf'.
Apply hl·penon 10
Mr. Bill Jusseaumf'
between 11 & noon & 5 & 6
excpPt Monday & Tuesday
Newporl Harbor
Yacht Club
720 W. Bay Avt
Newport Beach
S84
WEEKLY SALARY
WlfR
BUNNY
Age 19-35
If yoU nN'd extr11 monPy to
psy for those Easter outlits;
Mr. Wortz PR '4-2Q'lt
• B<wlt Assembler~
• Helpers
• Carprnters
• Painter~
•Mold Maker
JenHn Marine Corp.
235 Fisher, Cosla Ml'M
Pickwick Book Shop
Nerds AgmasivP young
man to learn book busint'ss.
Experience helpful but not
ne<'l'SS8ry. Sr,. Manll~l'r.
Soulh Coa~t Plau, Costa
Mt>Sll.
\\ anterl lmmt'Clrately
Final Detail &
CIHnup Man
for ya<'hl m11nufacturrr.
Apply 161!'.! Plll<'l'ntia Ave.
Costa M<'M
--&-rv1c(' Statm_n __
SALESMAN
$72.50
Mr. Abrams 'T74.20m
JANITOR &
GENERAL ClW.lJP
ServiCP department. Automo-
br.11' l'XPtrience. Neat In ·~
i>('arance. Contact -Service
ManaJtM", Bob Rogalski.
NABERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd.
Coslll Mesa
Salesmen & Man119r1
Career oppony with ltadina
firm offering o~er 100 mu-
111&1 funt\1. Full OT pt time
No exper nee. we train.
Npt Sch ottlce, 642-6422
Salllll Ana ottice, 547-&ll
Investors F!nandal
Service•. Inc.
Experienced
Plumber
Earls Plumbing
1526 Newport Blvd, CM
$70 WHK
Part-time Eve
6 Jn JO: 30 PM. No el(JX'r nec-
esAAry, Nt'al It dependable
ARI'S 19 In 35. Stlu • str·
\1<'t'. Call 547-7783.
CARRIER BOYS
GOOD ROUTI3
AVAILABLE
HUNTINGTON BEACH ,
DAILY PILOT
• GU-4321 e
BOYS 10 ·14
Full limr. Good !ial1ry -L Good routtt! • Good profit!
hrnrhts. E"<prr. ONLY "P-BALBOA PENINSULA
pt_v. JIM TICF: CllEVRON DAILY PILOT
Z'iOO ~"WJ'Ort Rtvrl , C'.M. e. &42-4321 e
--FRY-COOKS-Car Wash Help
Full time or wkends. . NpE'fl 4 4"Xper. mpn lor new
Dishwashen
Busboys
Apply In peraon
Coco's
Famous
Hamburgers
78 f 1shion lsl1nd
Newport Buch
YOUNG MEN
WHO HAVE THE
DESIRE FOR MONEY
AND OPPORTUNITY
$600-$800 PER MO.
Join a national Co.
Operating in 50 states
Car necessary
Ages 20-30
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
TO $11,000-$25,000
Retittment
insurance. Stock Option
Profit slwinl
('all ror intef'Vil'W
633-5937. ext U
Mon It Tues 9 a.m-9 pm
ARCHITECTURAi.
SENIOR
DIAASMAN
\.tin age JR, apply In pe~n mod. collee abop. Days 'T'hl'ff y~ars experlenct.
LIDO CAR WASH Must ~ fast. reliablt . Xlnt. Permanent employment •
·tin E. 1ith Co~t.11 ~1esa sat Apply 2-4 p.m. Excepdonal growth op-
RUTH RYAN AGENCY
1193 Newport, CM, MS-4854
17931 Beach, H.B. 847-9611
100 W. 17th, S.A. 547~
Decorator Se1etl type .. S425
Trnt/~ ole/2'l-25 .. to $325
MKtg Secy. 9/60 fig •.•• $500
ARGUS EMPLOYMENT
CONSULTANT AGENCY
2043 Westclill, NB 548-7796
1624 E. 17th, S.A. 547.Q36
1695 eres· nt/ Anbm GJ:>09.11
Help.Want..S
Women 7400
EXPERIENCED • licensed
shampoo girt for exclllSive
Salon in Faahlon Island.
Newport Beach. C a 11
644-1484 or 644-2151 Mon
t.hru Sat. 9 to 6.
SeWing machine operators,
Sportswear, 10me trainers
being accepted. Appl.Y 'BJ1
\ Oa.k St .. Santa Ans. 7:30
to 3:30.
EXP ER St mo I< P B' X
operator tor front office
desk in Motor Hotel in
l;;u,una BNch. (714) 494-
4563
E X P E R I ~ N C E D Apt
manager. 34 unit.. 2 pool5,
no malnt. •m rtnt & s-t5
mo. 1998 Maple St. CM. Call
Irwin 213: 86&--0781
RN. PART-TIME. 3 to 11 &:
11 to 7 11hifls. Excrllent
salary & benefits. Park Lido
Convalesc11nt Center 466
Flags.hip Rd. NB 644--8044
WANTED RN'a tor reliel 3
tn 11 A 11 to 7. Apply
Huntington V 1 I I t y Con-
valncent Hosp , I 3 I l
Newman, HB.
BABYSITTER, my home,
depeidllbltt oldl'r woman
preferTed. CM. 543-5248 aft
6
PA RT·TlME Experienced
Doughnut maker. A p p I y
Dolly o· Doughnut. 9148
Brookhurtt. HB.
OPERATORS--
SportsWeer. Expentnced.
Steady. S80 -$1~. 1580
Monrovia, N.B. &42-2666.
e JNV!.m'OR Desires at·
tncti~e asa~ant 21 In 30.
Sinafe. no f!X))e~ Need-
ed. Call 541~ KrrCH.EN IIBLPER-.:-rny AMIGOS RESTAURANT portunity for qualilied
COOK CollP~P ~tudcnt noon 428 E. 17th, Cooa Mea3 penon! LADY, live In 1 to 2 months,
tn 5 p.m. 6 d11ys. A p p 1 y -BUStOYS--to ualst In hatbold dutltt It
ll bu 'I Apply in -c:an chldm. New baby ar-11m r~cr r cnry, 2136 N~ 2 for d11y sbll1. Must .-~· riving. ~7265
PlacentiA, O>sta Mcs;i. "-f t •-b'-.,... ast. nta • "' reUa "' Willard J....een EXPERIENCED
Intemewa w~ ooly,
April 17th, &-5.
Newport Beach &42~16
20il3 Westclltt Dr -Suite 204
CABINET
ASSEMBLERS
ht & 2nd Shift
Moblle Home
Experience
Exc•llent Opportunity
-Apply-
EIPlORfR
MOTORHOME CORP
4000 C1mpua Drive
Newport 8e1ch
SECRETARY
Short.hand 100. typin& 60.
G o o d opportunity ror
1lert. neat appearinit,
personable yowig lady.
Excellent working eondi·
tions and employtt bene-
fits. Phone Penonnel Oe-
pvtment ror appoint·
mpnL
673-3130
An equal opportunity
rmployer
WOMEN . MEN
TELEPHONE SALES
Pennantnt Part-Time
Work near homt in our ~--.·
Cocta MeSA newspai>('r
circulation Sales facilities.
E.-nploymf'nt offorrd t o
persona 11 to 64. Wt will
train you. Gu 11 r a n l I' c rl
wal!'ts & commission CALL
NOW!
~ ANGELES Tl~
1375 Sunflowu Ave
Co6111 Mna
540-5151 Ext 297 540-0301
Stllistiul Typist
F o r Consulting Engi·
n~~· office tn Newpor1
Btsch.
Phone Mr. Anclrewa
'75-3551
'vfaintnce men. C1tYOI La-Apply 2-4 p.m. dally. a h • 1 .~ WQRKRnn&a "-I M I
lt\lll• Sch. Str1'<'1 & S.-w"r AMIGOS RESTAURANT ~re ltect • AtMc .. ,_ vv ... , '"" p. e Counter Girl 1500 Adams. ea.ta Mna l>•:wriaon Dnlperiu. DIV~. Pmn S4JG..w16 . .Ettual 428 E. 17th. Costa Mesa 548-201) GEMCO
oppor Pmplr Apply Pub. Combinati.n. E st I m a tor NEED 2 F\llleretttt. Can Ory ca..ne~
Works Dept. C\t.v llall. 5<li Buytr ~ Wan~~man earn S4. hour. we train. Warner Ir Broolthunt
Fort'st. Start at S600 to Q mo. IA-BORED & H.B. Mn. C re e n b e r I Fount.atn Valley Small boat -1111ll('mbl y. Rt. guna 11111!1 ane. Weter Co 842-3515 Houri noon to 9 p.m.
q11ire11 ttxpenrnc:t' with h11M Exp. prrftl'T'ed. Ph. 837-0660 TIRED Nr'"'"' --.__. Good working condition.« l!l!\I~. drill f>ru~. 11tc Small lor ap11't. ~ lmm~tdy. be.,,. .. it· SALISLADY-r--
.iiop, ~teattu work. llltl' no ter. part-time In rey home. ; ROUTES AVAlI.Unz of watching TV. ~ 2 School are ctrta: near ~ oprntna for new product
banirr 6-16-&9Gt bl nlnp ~!weft.I I It 10 H~ lioKp. Ref. 642..al.29 fOf' l\ Wtmt!ft ~ 25. Must
EXPERtr:NCED Sr r v I c t Wt11Jnlnsttr for "'11 U~H p.m & would "'tllrr WANTED lady to live-In. ll 1 • e pleuant m»n:tina
St&tlon Salesman. t·un 1imP Good Profita • Ne Sunday WOT"k It Mrn a ftfJ<IJ room 6 boll:rd + small ~ct. Oar fW('ffM.ry. Aver-
d11)'1>. Apply Ande~ tlnk1n 0.llwry 642-<m aalary of ·~ S800 mo. For appoint· .,_ --yJa_ey. 2 Ollldnn 9, 11.
,.,..l"VlCf' 1645 Adam~. Costa POSITION 0 P·t N '°" $72,50 961-lMO mf'nt Call Mr. F'11mham.
iitr-aa qur.lllled Rtal ts t, t ~ NT.a528 10 AM-4:JI PM.
WAITRESSES
Experienced only!
Apply in Penon
SURF & SIRLOIN
5930 Pac. Cst. Hwy.
Newport 8e1ch --s EC R ErARY-Bookkeeper
tor dental office. Requires
ln•tWgence. Initiative &
ple11ant persona_lity. Dent.al
exper. no taeriUa.I. Write
c/o Daily Pilot Box M86.
CHRISTIAN Wom11n t o
babysit on Wed &: Sun eves
In the n urseey of Central
Bible Church. CM 54s-4567
J~n, Wom. 7500
ACCOUNTS
PAYABLE
ClERK
Minimum two yurs ex·
perience. l~key adding
calculator and light tyJ>
Ing.
EXPEDITOR
RespoMlble job for yowig
draft exempt man. Trtln·
ee pol!itlon.
ASSEMBLERS
Somt ,.~tnce nec-
l'l!Ury. Perman~nt posi-
tion.
MArnR
SPECIALTIES CO.
1640 Monrovia Ave.
Costa Mesa
642.2427
An equal opportunity
employer
local m1nuf 1Cturer h11
Immediate epenlnp for:
• Electronic
Auemblen
• w1r ....... or
WOIHll
We are an est.Ww...t
commerd1I firm with
llber1I frf ""9 benefits.
Only peopfe wit-" at
lea•t the monthl ex·
perMM• ahould .,,1y
t•
PAWDJCS
929 a.ker Street
Co.ti Mete
S4f..2221
SERVICE Sit. Att--'ant. S11le11man. For detalll ct11l WOMAN flVt<r 21 w1nlifd for ....... M M.R. ABRA~ n~ ailwt .......... M.., to wortt 8~ • · ' CO ---REIGN Flllltlme. Exptr . OVf'r Zl. I r Stl\llt~ " Don v ~-eau 54IHOft ... and co. rv
Apply Bob .• MobU(', Sprina· Franldln'• of.Ike m-rm DANCER! ~ than 100 countrltt A dale &: Edln&<'r H.B. --_ _, -A Job wtildi will I"°" wit.JI C.M. ._ _,. llO Job dalll<tona. r-...._
SERV1CE Sit Allcndant, ~~;r :t;~~!:' ~ O>unty. A locallY CED ~ .-;m'! ~ IM OK. Write P.O, Box m7.
over 21. Ugbl mtcll aper. have Rood e&1 A~ lk'pmdt ownt'd and as>mttflll llllilD W'lfttfd.. ~ Bai Quit YAKE SS br run, ar.n.. 991.
Union Station, an s~. able. Wrltt: PO lbx 'IM cM corporaUoo, nffdtt • man • Bttu17 Sibl. 64>-«m -l\aDn ..,,rt, ~ ~ ai.z W'tt>. Ma.brt wen. a
NB --woman capable ol ._.. FOR PUBLIC STENO. -.. _. - -maid _...... --t .. l _ .. _. f'\JLL TUne Rl"fb stlltton with bultnea OWMt'lt and ......-. _...,_ ..,.. .. ..,.. -"" .........
Sl:ltVJCE at.ation Lubt Man htlp; nl&Ma, M-. bt ewer cMc Jtac!rn. ~ rood t11*t Medtd. RESPONS181.E Pt r s o n klU7 + A1l ~ ton t I m " • ~r1C"netd. 2S )Tl. old A ~tne9d 1D unlimited ~ rta:tat pelUI. p. .....at .,.... _...,... noon-.a pm, M'COO'S N'*9 JUnll>'-dtllk
OY.1' n .• ~ F. t'lth St. C.M m~l\la. Rtl.. to-41G o. Box 1112. NA • MEDlCAL Alllltant It. c Ir fOf' ~. Btldl .,... uac.-lonc PllBO Pla1e'I' -e LANDSCAPING • R_ul lstate s.tl.m;ft PART TtMa-olflce O"Pft'. Xraya It lnttt-~ Call Ml-lGl !Of QPlo ~76 ti.t S:JO A "30 p..m. WANTED. We .. traift. C&J1 ~ tor Bridal CourWJ. Uon. Sllary opm. ln-rAI WOMEN Ml'll i;o, Jl boun e R£STAURANT REt.P,..,..-.
MAK£ A M'£MO 'O pu.r Vlftqt ftnl WI.ate on. 3 t<YH P'!t' •ftl A 4 leb)'ailteor, my ~-;5 dllYt wftk aa a hUcrrHr. fllrt. •PART·TtME •
Ill> t~ .)IOU no lonrw need, 112-44'11 or MMlll houn Sat Avf!Jql • "" wed. 1 cllUd. H~ ~. I0-1992. • ~ •
1tU tbtm fOr CUii wftil • SERVlCE llatton Al· •eelc. Mu l be ..a_... Beach. W-1135 BA.BYBJ'ilLlt 2:,_, to l :l> COOK wanWd for out ot
Oamrteo Adi. ~ fO.STI 1mtant. Ml ._, d"Y•· eel It ovn 71. m.1m PAIT TIMI MAID Motl duv rrt my bome -~ rtat. Call ..-:
toda_yl JOO\ Briltot.. c-. M..a WhJte de)lllilllta'T .,._ •... • s..ma e o.ta .._ M5o4D.2 MrlSU or m-ciJ --
tor two )'OtJnC exiecutiws.
Minimum of 2 yean .ec-
retarial experiea requir-
ed plus 80 wpm SH. rcom-
pany reimbunn fee)
I
A~ .. Secy.
$450
No abortband required,·
but must have good 1tata.
tical typing. CPA or At:;
c."OUnting Dtpt. ~
helpful. Ccornpe.ny pays
feel
G•.loollkHpi ..
$4ll
T)'l)f S5 wpm, good telf.
phone voice. Ueht ~Y·
roll: beevy accounts re--
ceivable. I applicant pa,ys
lttl
AttetltiOtl:
Gfrts Fri4My!
Excellent top.paying, lo-
::al posidoea wt>ich require
a g~Mll ptfic:e beck-
rroond with rood typini
ability.
MEN
Sol• ... , • ..,
l' Te $14,000
18.SEE or f'qUival~nt for
Digital Systems and O>m-
!lpooents lfrm. Automobile
plus ex~M'I plua bonus:
(company PllYI fee I
Deal .. Dtuft • $12,400
Would Uk~ 12-15 Ytln flC-
perience to aSIOdatt with
an ardlllectural. planner
and coMultinr firm. (!ff
by applicant)
1..W.W..
$10,000
Sales ex:perienc» hi by.
draulic mMufacturtn&,..
quired, to do C!U!ltomer
contact for excellent com·
pany. lltt nl'&'Otiable >
s.,.m..
(Dye c.t) $IOOO
All oul.ltand6nr company
requiret man wttb either
dye cut ar madllne IQ.
pervt,ory e~ The
btneftta are t!l<C!ptional r com PG)' pays fee)
9.e. Ted.le•
$7800
Minimum l .Y8N ~rl
ence in tlectn>nlca nopelr
or technical aervtoe. H.S.
graduate. llee n~l
M•11•_, T ......
$7100
llll.lllt be &Qrelllive W'lth
l"OlleJ~ dfll'W. ComPMY
prefen a mArrted m.an. Ex~Unil tralntns a n d
Pl'OmOtlon ~. Mult
mvt MIPfrvilory potent·
la.I. (~ ~.IHI
'42~
newport ..
personnel
agency
TIMPOIAIY
DIVISION
for the ewpabl nmM
ln.t.l'l'tllted '" b)p PQlns local Wf1'1Poe'V7 Jobe. .
.
' " I
:.1.
r a
pli·
:lst
m-
SH
10-
to
d
Ol'
L&l.
rk
es.
!C-
ir·
ID·
!d,•
la·
~
oe
)'I
or
D·
le
s!
1.
r ,,
')
It
y
I.
5
t
... ,..__ ............
--
JOl9 I IMKOY.aNT ~ti Paa MllCMANDfSI POI MffCRAfmfSI~ -rRANSPOITATIOH ~-~TION N
SdMlll IMI• ..._ 1a SALi AND 'IMO,!_ SALi AND TUDI SALi ANO T'RAOI MeWle "--,_ ,....,.eel l\utoe 9600 lmpotiM Autos 9600 Autot W1nt9d
Appftenca 1100 ..._,.as..,_ att FREE TO YOU MEiCEDIS •.-..Z 'VOLKSWAGEN
9700 Used Cara
1111 REFRIGERATOR 19 Q.m Staa. ...... l..ABIWXm Reertfvw 1 yr $1"UO ~ NEW HOtPOlNT s..... Beeldu.l c:mll!IM. ok1.. J'tlUle _ (reat wtlh New 24 Wide
MO rltOGaAMMfNG 1.artl i: ~ o.b'olt Lett .. ~.,..,.... e Isl td r. ft. All lbots. TW9 ~·0 a.drm
'
iMA• .. -...... ~ OR ct ol fl'US ar I0\&11 .,,.,_ W B&A.CB SUPPLY """' .. ~' '""' ~ a..ut Dept., 11111 BMeb Bl1'd. GROC. CHICKING 111.ake Paym.ents ol S2 Week .,.Tm, AnUeJm .,.. __ WM~ MlO Bl ~ ..a. UMllJ 'TRONIC ASSIMaL Y ll'lT Hu1>or Bll'd., c.K. --. ,_
(l r .lll<Jt' ( uunl y -,
l .11 ,·tt'',f ~n .. •lt.">~ ~IUP
N. "· .ii. l '·-• d
'.\, · .I B· ":
J im Siemon') Imps.
\".; I '1 I l'). ,",• 111\ t,f PIX/TYP 0pe:ri til t ~·Ill.Ml __ .. ;ml;;lll;;n;;11;;"';;;;;;;;MGO;;;; NEW w ·oav1r .. West (Et WAS $111 POOL TAILll Air Com'""°'. to uo PSt. --2 Left tt $l.f9 Cleh t11 &m BRUMSWlCK iae. volume tank; puce A '61-Mercedeli!IO SL Rd1ter.
Trtlde a au•rn OJl ""AJa .-'J'IUANGl.S Pvmlhlre.Apt>lllncet prea swftd). suo. ~2878 Xlnt mecllanleally. Needs
W~NTED Aute T .... & Equip M10
5.,,,,_, An 1 "k·:ll·l
Dhiam ol Pay--,_ of •1.16 \AL &late from • "-lo TV' 5 interior work. $53 deJ.s. ,,_.,q • """ -r a.-tereoa •••ume contract bal. Can ComPQllar a Software Inc. 18Tf a.rt>or Blvd., C.M. i 8tuawwldt sm ¥W .. -TOOLS _ Tr1Uer, Tr1v.t 9425 -~ a..dt Opai di I p,m. ONLY ama t9Wll fin pvt pty 494-9771 6-888~ -RENT~IUY-1ao,r. f'INANCJMQ Al·l2ll :!° -11' SCADABOUT, slpa. 4; EARLY '68 Mercedea 230 53 UK SICARD POOa. __ <Alk_ "'r Art) equip. • I ltove, alnk, IC6o AM/FM, W/W, pwr. stett &
New automa&....... ms. Maia. ~ nJRNrruRE Stereo comp} box o\ aide attachable tent. brakes. 673-2050 646-3410 eve 81 C $2 Week ... ,_ bamehokiL Will pay cub Ulled once! ~ 1mr Ganim Gr. " ' COLOR ..,......G TV _._
··Bttts lJv"8 tbn1 ~, 9!!!!1!111!!!!!!!!!!!!1!1!!..-~lll!'!• MS-79116 538-8591 540-llD3. Mei
F.dwatioa" OPEN t DAYS SPANISH W1NiT-T.ru ·...;.cb _____ 9_SOO_ --------------$39.9531 lfS.lotl h 1700 -u FOR 2 door . <:U1tom made • k1w • Mic lnery, etc. .57 P!CKUP, Heml motor, MGB 19G5 -Must se ! I T lnl 81.dtable fot ~ • u end De .,,.._ •61 lie smno dev Going to N.Y. Xlnt cond. Secretarl1 ra n1 An _ ___!!_.,_ 1110 t ab 1 e o'r DECXIRATOR 195.1 FORK.LIFT, 12' hl-k> ....,.., ' ' ··-· ' \Vire wheels. R&H. $1695. or
ATTEND 'MiE -·~-----PIECE Removable Marble mut fUU •.OOO lb Utt. $796. ~:in ~OO or otter. otter. 833-1234 Ext. 3<Mi or Most Modern Up-..01tt WANTED FOR CASH top, dark Oak with aold de-Will finance. Carpet ram 675"-3846
BUSINESS COLI.EGE in the OR ON CONSrGNMENT ai&n. OU landlcapea, various $100 63lH~1, Re_:' _!17-2433 '65 Ford Pickup, new brakes, '1.1 MG Midget, llke new. SC3
Southland. The IChool ot Antiques-0~ P*es 1t -IVESTOCK lumber nck. metal tool box. t bal _. .. item1 too nwnerooa lilt. ·-PETS and LA ,.. / F M r a d . $1 2 0 0 . del, auume oontrac -· Programmed i..tn1nl ••"' Art t~ Irta, Corona del Mar m.&n6 -· -,. Can fin pvt pty, Dlr
the "fmia.blllr IChool" touch. Stamps.Coins aft 6 p.tn. AU day 1t Eve. Peta, Chner1I HOO 56-51.0T ti+-9771
Complete Secretarial -AUCTION & SHOW wkendl. MACAW PARROT '65 FORD Econoline, 6 cyl., •52 MG TD "Oawc" Restrd. BruslJJJ> -IBM Keypunch. SATURDAY, APRIL 15th --it.Md. shift; $l«iG: good Xlnt __ ._ •-~.1 Br
-.. ... '""Y Mooday-Enntni .... _. SUNDAY, APRn. 2:1.lt * AUCTION * Excel Cond. condition. l46-839'J Eve/wk· m""" "" rung .. -......... · ""'-' • ..,, uu" ~ 544-5™ t' Ra.c Grn, nu uphl, rad, $950 claaea a.tso. For estlmatea le ln1o CAU.: U ~ will sell ot bey any ime end. Pvt pty 67l-0416
POLLY PRIEST 531-Ul2 893-.ai55 &ive Windy a try 1125 'S4 International Scout. Must ..=::::::i::::;====::=
BUSJNES.5 COL.LEGE (%13) 598-3338. Ask for "Bud" AuctlOlll Frld1y 7 p.m. ~---------1ee to Appreciate! Many OPEL
Th• n-xt bat tf\ln9
to 1 new car:
a uHCI cir with
• 100% 9uar1ntff.
Every major worldnti part•
is guaranteed 100% for 30
days or 1000 Jnlles. w~
ever cornea tint. So U dur-
ing that time anYtblni eoes
wrong with an.v o1 tbele
parts, we'll ttp&lr or re-
place it free.
For instance:
• engine • transm1aelon •
rear axle • front axle aasem·
blies e brake syttem •
electrical system
READY TO 60
OVER 70
VOLKSWAGENS
TO CHOOSE ROM
LARGEST SELECTION
IN OIANGE COUNTY
WE PAY TOP
PRICE
FOR NICE CARS
AND TRUCKS
Any Make or Model.
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2121 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
546-1203
325 N. Newport Bl .. N.B. C&ta.loguing ends April 11th. Windy's Auction 81m GERMAN SHEPHERD Extras! ns W. WU.On, CM ~
Phone 548-9723 A.OK Behind Ton,y'1 Bldg. Mat'I PUPS A,.._ F4 after 5 PM OPEL 1968 Coupe, 563 mllea. c -
l.JFETIME Gilt • Chilcoat 10 Commission Galleri• :ms~ Newport, CM 646-a686 AKC re&istered Champion 196..! CHEV PU, 6 cyl., 8' Ownen change of plans re-~ ~Typing School 173 Dd 7722 Garden Grove Blvd. SS BLOOD LINES b e d • r a d I 0. beat er. quires lmmed sale. $1800. sO
Mar. CM. 548-2859 Mon-Wed. ~srER SS CASH 1 Cb: ULK WlKJNG-overdrive. $625 (wboltaale 54&-3414 anytime ~ o; W1'D Buy
CHEVROLET
'62 CHEV
t Sl>ffd Spyder. Radio, But· ,
er. MVST" U:LL! Dir.
f130.00
Phone: 842·''°' '1 I
'67 CAMARO, red, llke MW
conct. 327 V-8, auto, fact. 1
air, many extru. Don't buy '
without seeing thia first!
Make oiler. Orii owner
548-9554 834-2367
GOING into service, must
aell. '67 CHEV, SS 396;
model 13817; 8 cyl .. 4 apeed.
Xlnt cond. 8,000 Mi.1 ult.
$2600, 54()..3558
9 PASS Wagon, 1960 Chev, 6
with P/g. ORIG OWNER,
$39!). 675-lSO'l
1961. Impala convertible
Popular year, Good car.
$390 49M244
1961 CHEV Bel Air S~
Wag. $rii0. 54,000 actual
tnilea. Xln t. 549-1556
1965 MALIBU. R&H
35,000 ml, Fine craduatbl
P'elC!Dt! $1225 54~2783
'62 CHEVY Il NOVA
$350. or best of!er e Eves. Call 536-4632 •
1964 Chev, MeUbu SS, V8,
4-spd, new tires, very cln,
$1000. 548-3659
CHRYSLER
e SEWING e We pay cub 1or1 BLtrr Sch m price). 6*-2977 after 6 PM _;;::::::::::::::::::==== ·e~ ,~p
DESIGN & PA1TERNS Pianos & Or91n1 1130 ., Furniture ., ApplJanca Top wlnnlng Shepherd '62 CHEVY ~ ton PU. a· PORSCHE ' ,,
./ Antiques ./ Toola ol all Timea bed, -dlo A beater. $7'25. Your Volkswagen or Porsche 331 Ogle St., Cotta Mesa OS ORGANS * '• U P 'd f * PIAN • ON ITEM or -2. 01. NORDRAAK 646-1286 pon'CHE 549-0303 -673-1 190 "pay top do ~rs. al or CONTINENTAC MERCHANDISE FQR *Largest stock in So. _Calif. COMPLETE HOUSEFUL. of MATTERHORN IU u11 HAU01t ILYD, conAMIU. or not. Call Ra pb SALE AND TRADE * 20%...0% off.Player pianol Call 547~48 or' m.mi 3 times Pacltic Recre1t'n Vehlclet 9515 whi blk int 673-1190 bl
'63 <llrysl.er New Yorker. 1
owner, Xlnt cond, Fully
equip. $1600 Eves. 54S.Qia9
1000 rolla to choose from -.., S Coast Victor '60 Coupe • Red '67 SED. te, · · 'Cl CONT. conv., It. ue: * OOL TABLE GOLF ,.._ .... , licensed for •:;9 Coupe • yauow radio, fitted cover. b'ki rack, real clean: Xlnt tlrett ()rjg. • -8000 * Termr. • Terms ·Terms · Male11-Fema.lea (5 weeks) -....n ~
Furniture sh f lano trade TOP NAMF.S' Bla k T ( hots) street uae, $350. Eve s '59 Coupe • Sliver chains, xlnt cond, 9 mo., Used Cata 9900 owner $895 646-2071
--------ca or your P or -. c • an s '59 Coupe -Blue 9700 Mi S16!}5. 675-ll66 Jim ----· ---------™-™~ ___ ____,. __ FURNITURE '""'nd piano for new spinet From-$295. SU. month BRED FOR QUALITY 838-3262, or days ~ , ---F LCON
-;;;kl'• Wboluol• Pl..., Co-Bnuuwiok, 0.1"; "'""'• • TEMPERAMENT • -~---·. ·~ VW ..._1;..~..._.-., · ~-A --· --
Returned fro':" 1~~!!.Q:i!pman 26 mod . ..fil!.t!.~.:.~( life-~ C, Qtrt -·--..!520 ~ _ co~6~~--·62-FalcOn s=quire~w....... -..___.__..,,cor•m~ c&.raen"trove <n4l 638-o time guar. BADGER, u 8-48«i Days 1().2 P --
Spanish Medlterr1ne1n ORGANS & PIANOS 4t1f s. Main, Orange 538-0nl 837-3865 .ftves aft 6:30.PM 'TRANSPORTERS ~ 0 '61 camper WesUalia 24,000 auto. perf cood. 139 del, ALL NEW U' • SELL ood BUSES-CAMPERS s ml rack, radio. S 2 3 5 0 ~ume contract '*· Can • , Hammond M. 100 s p I n et, WE 8 • AKC Reg. Min. P le PUJ>-' ~ S3&-lQJS fin pvt pty. Dir 4!»-9771 Must Sacrifice $615 used only $895; also used e Di1mond1 • Gold pies. 5 Wks. 1 Coal black, 1 '59 vw 9 pass deluxe Bus A' ,4 ,
3
mll '62 Falcon -t DR station
WAS ORIG. $1698. Bald~. Conn, Lowrey, Antique & Old Jewelry Parti..poodle, 1 Otampagne. sunroof, radio ~ 59 VW. new e~g., ,00> • \P;'agon. R/H. stick ahUf
ITEMS AS FOLLOWS: from $395. L 0 t • of used Almost anytbfnc. TRADES. $100. ea. Can be seen at 6681 ,67 VW 9 pass es. $695. Leaving state. Xlnt S450. * 642~
Gorgeous 8 rt. Spanish Mila. grands, spinet. Ir COOIOle C. M. Jewelry & Loan Sutton Ave. Westminltert. '&5 Deluxa Bus 9 pass (2) 549.0303 -673-1190 cood. 546-16ffi Eves. 1""~ F••,,.....,N Convertible and M a t c h I n g Chair. pianos. 1838 Newport Blvd .. C.M. Mother & Father are a 63 Delux B 9 """ ~v
Custom q u 11 t e d with .. ~.pmLLJPs CO. • "'"7741 • residence. 897-9095 • e us pau mt 1Wtao1 ILYD. COSTA MUA VOLVO ~ owner. R&H, 4 ~. ~'"""' cu .....,.. -Porsche -Show Plecel Sacrifice! 675-0726 aft. 5. carved wood trim. R. 10 It. 1907 N. Main, Santa Ana__ D'~UUIASHER HOW About an EASTER
Seville Carved velvet aota, PIANOS & ORGANS NE~HOTPOINT POODLE? Exceptional o " 1:: YC:~c:i::y·!~= '681/2 VOLVO FORD heavy~ oak end ".1h~ •• • MAJOR BR.ANDS SAVE ~= AKC re& quality. $150. ~ HEREI and l"-h'"" cocktail "' AMO.o ..,., ~ 0 LATE '66 Red Porsche 912. 5 NOW Dl8; ...... Ki.. '"'~-M .. ,; NEW I: USED Built·in °'"used aa ""rtable. ....;...._______ s SEE THEM TODAY .... _ .. .._
e. lied WALLICH'S.MANNING'S $140 or pmta of -"' H. Automatic. P/S • P/B. bl I Piece ng......., =-.... MIN DACHSHUNDS ,0 ~ spdllgh .. :.1838-nstru2288ment panel, fog cd L '63 FORD Convern.,..,, n ""
ltemmean ou s:ne full MUSIC CITY $2.50 WEEK Only 2 malea left. '" a.... 1tin:i Top cond. 26().C Hamilton, ~~ 1111te wlrin Ir 3400 So. Bristol 1877 Harbor mvd., C.M. AKC regiatered. $60 each '65 Ponche, white w/extras, tWt. WllG Costa Mesa. u~taira. ftM' Kmg llZe bOx ap .~d So Coast Plam Open til 9 p.m. • 962-1689 • orig owner. exc corid $3500.
mattress. Large Spani:iu e-· -·-" and m "494303 -673-1190 5~718 after 5 p.m. IMPORTS _54_8_-2_684 _____ _ cor dining roo... "-Ld leaf ' 540·7165 MOVING back East must RUSSIAN wV<l bO • ,.,, ~
.... U\J be t f AKC ,,,, HAAIOtl ILVD. COSTA MISA En~lish Ford '&-1 sta. wag. S ._ .. table lam"" H .. ,,a. • .... ,,..OND Chord n........ sell. House full ot furniture mo, au. apr em, •
pani... ,..... -CUUDJu "''•-· sholll H tmd 4!M-2376 '68 CHEVY custom sports RENAULT man shift, R/H, bd mrts. ing swag lamps, etc., etc. <Walnut) ADULT OWNED includingpa~esCBlarge · se · ., ___ ,1 1 Van (SUMMER JS HERE). 1966 Harbor, C.M. 38,<XXl mi.. good tires II Ea .... p;ece ~ ..... be nonortia.-Pvt Pty $300 call~ • amall. o..,.UV'-" Cl • rl· PUREBRED Afr ~..,. ........ •-ba ~Qnt\ Mt ,. ........
""' • ....,., r-~ $11 L Am lifl "--kl Gd Excellent for lww1g "" '62 Renault Gordini, T"I)
9610
'57 Chev 2 dr ............ $99 tt<'I')' • .auv. ~,.,.,.. ed individ"~n". 83 Hamond n....... dio O. inea.r P er yr, fem. ..,... ess. ..~ _._ . S C _ _ ~ "'
111
.... .,,,0 _.._ •--"""7838 M•""""tlo v<LNrr:J:: 9 to 5 beach, aownll'. • zpountaina cond, Must sell. S275 or port "' '59 Pontiac 4 dr ........ $199 '6"~ Ford-2 door Fairlane, Tenxu ava.llable with Leslie speakm __. · • m.-. • .,._. · .._...... n .,....,,,...,, Looka and rides ireat, at make offer. fA8-8102 'fil Rambler American • $'.!!¥! stick shitt, good cond. ~· Newcomers to Calif. Excel cond. 67!>3606 FRIGIDAIRE wan oven & BOXER PUPS. AKC nite like aleeping on a Sea 681/ MG ""99
l (bum ) COP ~~ -2 ·:;9 T-Bird ........... • .. "'' 642-7804 Credit approved lmme<liatey Wurlitur sni....1 piaJ1!:> tuU cooking top en · 4!K-67.>.> ly. )50 HP. over load TOYOTA NOW HEREI '61 m ................ $499 • _6.5_G_al_axy--500-.-a""e_an_289~ R-& D FURNITURE >e·"'-rd, llk:-new. M.i.. or PERTO?iE. perfec~ S95 Daily 9-L Weekends !M ~ 6 •ta ~I I l z er• SPORTATION
" .ruva "' !::12973 both, 3 section DIVAN $45 * Doberman p 1 n 8 c be r , chrome bumper &: bub. 108'! YOTA SEE THEM TODAY TRAN ,
1
bl Eng. White, vinyl int. 33,500 1844 Newport Blvd., c.M. best offer v•...-Maple fini!hed dbl chest wheel baae. Like new, only 681/2 TO 100% Financing Av111 a e mi 4 dr SliOO 67J-0822
Every night 'til 9 PRlVA'i"E Party wanta to DRAWERS $35. 546-Q29 ~=ier~. M~. ~:~· 1800 ml. $2750. Dally Ii: NOW HEREI cd,,. .. LA1n: I Also we carry our own '56 Fard coov. A·I eng, tirs,
Sat & Sun 't1l 6 buy pta.no for caab. 543-9335 HERITAGE Walnut dining "6' weekends 'til 5:30 496-5791 SEE THEM TODAY tWlr UU\O contracts shocks. PIS. P/B. PW. Hand SPANISH th 4 bla k BLACK Poodler., AKC, or KJ 7-7761. Eve 1. $49 tO $499 contrlr $1$. 646-6849 room table, wt c small miniature. $75 eJ L IMPORTS "' From Mfn. Showroom Television ~ 1205 leather chairs, continental • 642--0328 • 4.92-7828 11111.. ,,.,: 1 • NEWPORTER MOTORS ·59 Ford Coov't, a ood ~ height, 2 extra leaves, '65 "Dreamer" 10%' on ~ T tWt, UUIG 2036 Harbor Blvd 548·529:1 transportation $150. Dlr. SAMPLES perfect cood. 1&crifice $350. ARC Reg. German Shepherd 63 Chev Clean $2200 or trade 303 --494 m1 Llvln"' Room s.t RENT OR IUY ··~,,OM! ......... Otam:plon aired. 6 · IMPORTS 1966 Harbor, C.M. &16-9 NEED A CAR? Z:::::-i::::::=====I • .............., ..-...-for late model truck or lta. CAN'T BE FINANCED? 1~~~~.~~ c•L•R P-IAN-O--Up_rtgb_t __ __,,bl.,..o-nd
7
• Wks. Shotl. $50 up. 54~1296 wacon •14 sp. 64H223 Antiques, Claula 9615 •Bankrupt! •Repoaellioii! MERCURY 11.p .. Dl-~e ~-t $110. Portable typewriter, Afghan ~ppiff 4 wks old '65 v.w. Camper w/cabana. 1966 Harbor c M 646-9303 e Bad Credit? • Divorced?
;r ~ ...,.. .,. $25. Alie for M a r I en e AKC, black muked, silver Xlnt cond. New ret>lt eng. · · · '26 CHEVY •Military •New 1Q Area:J '65 Mere Mont, 4 dr, oa.
1 ONLY. Oak·top hexagon 6*--0652 or 545-7Z31 le platinum. 675-1132 w/guar. New tii:es. Sl.800. TOYOTA Showroom condition. Make Payday Payment& owner. R&H, air, pb, pa,
exten. tableb1w/k4 wrou!t TV 8MM Camera, projector, ll30 Private party. 962--0738 MIM<e offer. Dir. 494-9771 McCARTHY MOTORS xlnt t'Ond. Pvt pty, n485
iron chain, ac « av • lghtl It splicer, $10. 0 Id Hor'" CHEVROLET bua converted HEADQUARTERS 1941 FORD 2 Door Sedan. 1 1420 So. Ma.in & Edin&er See at Z544 Newprt Blvd
ir.pc B-.. room S.t ..,.~ --· . .REG. QUARTER H : •""' do. $1l9.9S. .,...,_ bell ~ 140 E 20th ORSES to bouu car, new en."'RA & ELMORE Owner, 49,000 mi 1 e s . (2 blocks N. of Sean) CM ~ ftl St CM Id Urea $2'150. Ph 543-4927 542-1915 11.lter 3:(X) PM Santa Ana Pb 542-3507 Floor umple -ONLY 1. FREE " · · Top yearllng filly; 2 yr. o
Light ook. 'Rl>lz $229.95. NOW UPHOLSTERING • $79.50, 2 gelding, halter winner: 3 yr. Imported Autot 9600 9625 GARDEN GROVE BLVD Autot Wint.er
9700
BUICK
ONL y Sl09.9S! pc. <European <'ra!lllmenl old gelding, top pleasure & --------GARDEN GROVE JE '1·6630 :..:..:....;..;. _______
1 * Stock on hand ONLY. Free est, del, pic:lcup, 21.3 performant't! prospect: xlnl. y
11
-.-
1
-
1
-
1
-
111
-i,-.. -.-.-~-,,-~-i-
MUSTANG
'66 Mustang Hdtp V-8, P/S, '
stick. SS3 dels, assume co•
tract bal. Can fin, pvt pt;;.
Dir 49H'm
NO DOWN PAYMENT 1 Yean Parts & Main, HB "Berny" 5.1S-6405 broodh ma.re~r:1n':eA~: SCRAM·-LETS VOLKSWAGEN WE PACA .. s· H 3 Rooms Furniture KIRBY vacuum cleaner and c amp. Celt ·
Reg. S777 for S29654.85eek $ll.aMbor atta~i.. ~e ~ ~2~ d': crMu~~ ANSWERS· '67 SEO. white, bit. int. ra· Terms as low as S3 w • or sm -paymen · eves. dio, fitted t'OVeJ', ski rack,
Approved Furniture • G~::! s.=.~Mheuna· n.x.G -0-1-..0-EN,....,..,,.Pal...,....am-,tm~.-=3-y-ean-Fabric~ Elder_ Opium_ chains, xlnt oond. 9 mo., ~.~to~~::::-
2159 Harbor Blvd., C.M. N D • .1 ..,...,v .. ,£# -~1.... :zso Quarter hone 14 yn Mlvce _ MURDER 9700 Ml Sl695. 675-1166 Jim. .,...
Daily 9-9, lG-5 Sunday 0 ep . SI Body ' parts. Nrrer used, ;1~'. Gentle, pod' rtden. In New York a fellow call-&ROTH CHEVROIEI
e 5e9660 e Call~ 847-4377 ed up the GraW!dlntra' Un-DON'T p. n &WQ, .,et Alk tor Sales Manapr
BAKER .furn., 1930: 6' H~ Rent With WANT to buy military 45 or SPORTATION ion and asked when their crulck cu.II ior It wttb • l821l Beat'h m..
ptewhlte sideboard $400: 0 • t I g mm Luaer. Reasonable . ..:.T~ltA~N;..;...;,.~...;._---strike would be °"1', u be'd Daily Pilot want Adi Hanttngton Beach "
din. tble. 11B"X42". Sl'iO; ption o uy 646-1616 or 544-8575 Boats & Y1ehtt 9000 like k> MURDER bl.a wife. IC-561'1 KI 9'33.11 "
Otjppendile chain.
7 ~ If 521-7555 Hansen Surfboard 9'6" • Spot Cash for Imports ========::.......;========!
l arm, $650; 2 lealber arm • sso • 17' RUNABOUT hull, 12' We pay more for any Import 1 rted Aut 9600 lmportN •utos
chairs (pdl $75 each.111!!!!!~=====·!!! 64&-7956 Glasspar Ir 1raller. Xlnt reprdleaa o! year, make ii~m~po~~~~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 673-0379 1--F-t-LL-D-IRT WANTED oond! Sac. ~ aft 5. o. ooodltlon. Try m before Sota-bed. Chef'c.Y dining set ,1 __ .._ you ae I I. ELM 0 RE
coUtt Ir end tablet. ch1i~. Lacuna Bch lO,OOO CY. Sillboeta 9010 MOTORS, 9625 Garden
Rotary mower. Wool nig : '""· Ne.ly N• & •..ut-· 4~1840 Grove Blvd JE 7~
Misc. 54G-59&l Tva, WAIHl81, 808-0 THE CLOWN 23' Pembrok~ Cruiser, cln,
BEAU'nreL -•.1 coucb. 9 Children's patties, Magic seaworthy, SS radio, new ALFA ROMEO
5""' ...... aATOlll Show, Frtt Balloons ~ head, 135 hp Gray VS mtr --------tt. Semi circular. near MW AJIUUS-.-... .••~ ju ... --·erbld • ........__ alip, JUl'u •80 ALF A ROMEO d Sl75 OR "---"'"'" ._,uw ~ MINK Cape autumn·bair.e 28 '" v• ,..._ Y
con · .rv.><>• lnsrd tll Sept. Must all. Julietta Spy<!«' R.o.dlter ...... _ ood • -.t ..... ..,..... .. skins. $.1915. C&ll m.J592 ..Ao 1ArJe, beaut. '-ul!hj.. ..._..,.., $2.995. Phone fB.93'71 White, new bla"" top.
butch; like new coodttlon. FREE TO YOU SNOWBIRD F1ber 11.., No. PireUJ tlrea, nice interior. ia
67S-411' 432. 2 ~ d uUs, trlr. JE T~. lf no anner,
Beire nauphyde Iola. T'' LOVABLE With cblldren but Good cond, $425. 642-011'1 ..::m«lllS==·=====::: foam cuabiona, cuten; rood watch-doe far family _or_64_2-_3430 ___ .......,""'"'"'_
xlnt ccmd. $95. ~,~=~~~~~~ w1th fenced yard. Medtwn HOURLY RENTALS
ENT ~ mixed Ge rm an * RHODES 19'1 * Office !qvf P"*" I011 I Shepherd 147&7 4/lS Fun Zone Boat Co .. Balboa
AUSTIN HEALEY
1959 Austin Haley 1~
S'Tt'S. MechanJcall:y top
ahape. * 5C9-15?16 NCR v C'OLUE Shepherd ~ yrs. 33· RHODES SLOOP
(3) FULL !Ceyboard COLOR T hire fenale. • po e d . pioo (De.ya) U 3-5 O O 4: electric addlnl macbinet. Gentle, obedient, Xlnt with tEffl) 494-1843
$100 e&Ch. can John NTH cbldm. Sad but can't tUe DATSUN :i~~. ::-~::.Mr:. S9 MO Evf. 49+-«m 4115 PO'ftr crv1..... 9020 '11 Damm. P/S, radio "
day tbn Saturday Rental cu apply to purchde GJJn'l.E Male daJmat.lon 35• ELCO trunk c a b I n mlrron. $49 dell, auume
The toughest challenge
the other imports
ever had to face.
The Mini-Brute.
ORDER BY PHONE ex~Df'nt wtth c JI I I d r ' n . cruller. xlnt rvnnlY11 c:ond. eontnct b.'I. CM ftn pTt
Gar .. S.le I022 5 .. ..::1 ~en -5 1"· tt5 New can•aa ed. few after llCJ. DJr. 494-9TD au•ick's POnT.1.a• •'IV a a...S 12&: lA1-.Jf1fl deck, new uphol A radio. '15 Dattun a@dan, IPOCIH&. ·~ -2 MACKERAL Tabbies, 6 Best olfe'r. f1>.47ll evea. e>mce dellc, tedn SCS: 9 to 1:30 . T DAYS wb. old; Mother ~t $43 dtla, lllSUmt contract
Frlgldaltt, top rnr. ltP ctr Slam..: boaR-tntned. To loaf Trtllers '°" ti.), Can fin pYt J>'Y, Dlr. Opel I( ad ett
'40 BUICK UMITED 43,000
actual milts. Original thnJ·
out. Need.I clutch. SSOO. or
best offt>r. 713: W.7433
196.1 ruvIERA 2 door tm:ttp.
Automatic, radio, f u I I
power, air, $1195. 646-*41
CADILLAC
is6s SHA.RP. M-& wtafl. s auto, Must tell. $1900.
96Z-8229 aft 8 PA
: I Ji
OLDSMOllU
PLYMOUTH 1• PJy, Transportation (!lip.
good condition. S1!8 or 1*t
otter. 675-28'26
'59 PLY. Wagon, 8 cyt., pwr,
steer. New brakes It ba.tt.
Good C"Ond. $200. 96&--m>
PONTIAC
IOY CARVER
PONTIAC
• Barbot st., er.ta ,_.
Kl6-4444 ~-.../_·AA . Oruce Coomy'a Eicchldft caaa::.etlC Dealer for Roll.I • ~ ad
-··· ..... Bently. ~ '60 Pont. Ventura 4 Dr, hdtp. 1111§1 Auto,. power. Xlnt cood.
4 acre• (}f ultra modem total ..;S:.:.350~ • ...::546-5694 ___ ;._ __ ...,._,,_..
Cadillac tacllities designed '61 PONT. Catalina Setal'l
to better all and HJ'Vice st&. wag.; 6 peg .• u~
nrw end used Cadillac auto-p/s. p/h, t"8dio. 546-~
mobiles.
NABERS T-BIRD
'6'1 T·Bird LMclau hdtl). VnU
pwr, a1r, like new. S.1S3 deh1,
a&l\lme conttact bal. Can
fln pvt pt:y. Dlr C!)f-9771 ~ ~;.p.~~~ :::-i:o Low boy1.$~29 95n, port&bles aood bomea. 54&-GS 4/15 23 foot boet tralltt B~ .:::!n ,,,.._.., Alf, Cllt • ~ fttar) c . M · , Free to sood lloc'ne. AKC ""'t.ndem axJet, new T:50 owner. S46 dtll. usmoe G.ner1I Moto3' Jowest priced
-...i• M:Ha -milt-.,..~· Jo=.. ir •• ttre., • ltcena.-. -trVt b"al. c::. fta m
•100 t-Nt> UP .w.ru -or -er 1:ill w UJAPll. _m..Jll~.Jii~!t+""tm~-~==:tl l.uiUij SJ)9if:C6ii.., ____ _ ....._ ... ...... Do Clftl)'; .... 4llt MMlil~ ..:
~Blrd..cDurec...JKt~gp,.a ----~..__...,...,.,"*'1l~*"'"'!~nn&-t llr91. -~~~PS~~·..._-~
_ _.1-n.J~~=..=.;..:..;:;.:,;z:~+ .Xlnt a:wL Ollt lle:L. II
2600 HARBOR BLVD.
~ ~w:.:u;:; ~JS· _ ,,,.':[ Wll JGXD> -.... F...ie, 10 FACEL YIGA 52175 ••·-n liN --... wn• ~. ~ff'i: ~-:"""-wk . ._._.,._ -. Hlil **•ms a..tSltpMl•"*'I '°" ..... Pl.Us~· .. .,. ~ • Af'OC.: Gar. ~;;.. ,., TV Salet .n.. 5. SLIPS ~. "WJll!llt .., r.v. ··C1a11tc·· bnl LOCAL TAX • UCINSI
54().tCllS 20%7 Hart>ar Blvd CM ~ a...tt. male. t Wlltht.. a.di. a.SI boa.ta oe&. _ )Ont lnmmt a eet to
GAS 810VE RCA COLO. TV .JJltloea.560'75 4116 WtDm&brtalDed.~aftfl =~·1n~1r.•·~i STANSBURY BUICK Apt .s. s.12.so (Used) $150 ADOIWlt.E Kltt'; to~ ha 2S' to es·. MMt35 Nf!lda paint • *-· ._
so.a. 110 267"' SCRllN tioma call 5*31 ..... W...... t011 _bid f1llf!t ll,'700 ..... l1'l tvlCl-.MH~MC TIUCU
F!trti:Zm ~. escelle.nt p II ~-....... -·-_... _. .,_. II YOUJt l.D IM d'A· 1-. IT COS10 .. MISA ... ,., n6S
cotldldoft. Kad Yti"Y Ulllt llnu.:. ;;"aw C.M. r~ .:-......-_:-OAJLY UllD KITI na>t ..._ .. '9 ··U4-·l.•'•m-· • _,_, '•"'·-~----"" .,~ ~ tfl ' ,..;.. PD.Or .. zn"lildl ~ rood oand. eo.im Pl( .......... llllll .....
~ !
CHEVROLET
'SS CHEV. $95
~ 5-2• l()tJot, HB
NeedaC~f ~ .. rill • ,..... adl
am/S pm 833-1253
'56 (l cnmtt) T·~ bdtp W
cont lril Ltta than 56,000 •<>
tu11l mlln!
SlOOO. 67J.3528 alt ~.
'59° T·Blm. FULL JIOft!'·
G o o d OVERSIZED tlNt.
'590, &M-U9C ----e '64 T-8JJU) e
~,set111ftf
....___._..,__ _ _._. -__ ._ ·-•-.-.,,... -· ..,...._-~---__ .._ __ ._,.,,. _ ..... ,_.__ ......... --_.........__. ----'--~~-----'"---··-----.. ,... ..........
L
,_
-s •• (
------
---~ . . -.,..,.._ ......... -... ,,.---·--·-----~ ....................... ----.....-•. -..--... --........ -~ ..... -.; . .--.. .... ... -
We Begin to ~ature
A civil rights bill giving the United Stalt!s ita fi rst
nationwide open housing law has been passed.
How much it resulted from genuine desire to pro-
vide equal treatment for all Americans and how much
from emotional pressures following the assassination
of Martin Luther King is beside the pojnt. The fact to
face is that it is now the law of the land.
What do its open housing features mean? Here are
answers to the questions most frequently asked.
-The Jaw prohibits discrimination on grounds of
race, color. religion or nationaJ o r i g i n in connection
with the selling or renting of most housing. Private prop-
erty is already subject to much more severe governmen·
tal regulatlon limiting the use of property under zoning
laws and health and salety measures.
-Under charges of discrimination, the complaining
varty will have the burden of proof.
-The law does not preempt state housing laws.
-Property values in integrated neighborhoods are
at least as high as those in comparable segregated
neighborhoods, and often are higher. according to evi~
dence presented before the Congress. Their report said,
"The fear that property values will collapse if a neigh·
borhood ts integrated ls generally unfounded in fact."
-Lenders remain free to evaluate the loan appli·
cant as a credit risk. What is prohibited is a retusaJ to
lend or a discriminatory change in the terms or con·
ditions of a loan based on race. color, reli~ion or na-
tional origin of the applicant, or an associate of the
applicant.
-Property owners will continue to be free to re·
Cuse to deal with persons whose financial resources are
insufficient or who do not meet their P~~
-Protections are provided against "testers," those
who aren't bona fide buyers but are looking for test
cases for punitive damages.
The bill was thoroughly debated in Congress. Its
-
P.•nage ~ have been hastened by ttapa event.a but
at la not the result of emot1onally-4rtven acUoft.
It ..-ould be wbe to ac-Oel>t the law as another atep
on the rocky road to prevention ol anarchy and the M-
vancement o1 equality and jusUce tor all citiiem under
the law, regardless of race, creed or color.
In a world of fascinating and wonderful diversity,
America is finally beginning to mature.
A Silly Compromise Law
Back in the 19th century when the flow of J.nubi.
grants was at its peak. New Yort City saw a lot of
hanky panky at election time. Votes were "bourht .. in
various ways. one or them being free drinks at the
comer saloon. So laws were passed all across the nation
closing all bars during voting hours on election day.
An obvious anachronism today. the bar closing laws
hang on. Here in California the League of California
Cities tried to eliminate the discrimination against a
legitimate business. The league's committee on elec-
tions urged repeal of all such closing laws and the
league as a whole recommended this to the Legislature.
The Legislature acted in 1964, but it was a com-
romise. Bars are now permitted to do business on the
ays of elections other than state and national elections.
Despite this, some confused bar owners on the
range Coast decided lo play it safe last Tuesday a nd
refused service when they were legally entitled to
operate.
There are those voters who admit that the can-
didates olten drive them to drink -figuratively. and
sometimes literaUy. For those who like to plan ahead,
however. the bars WILL be closed June 4. California
Jrimary election day.
Brotherhood Is -C~ha_, f;µ_stro _
Are-Still
l'igtlette of • C: U11 i• Turnaoil _
• Ill Real
Who invented the steam-engine?
Most of us would say "Watt" -but
before him there had to be Rivaull,
Porta. de Caus, Worcester. Savory,
Desagullers, Blakely, Papin a n d
Huygens.
Did the American. Be n j a m J n
Franklin. discover the identity of
lightning an<A electricity in June, 1752?
~o did the fi'rcnch scientist, D'Abilard.
In a similar experiment -a month
earlier.
Did Joseph Henry Jay claim to the
electric motor? But. simultaneously,
the electric motor appeared in the
U.S .. England, f'ran~. Gi!rmany. and
ltaly.
1 DREDGED UP some oC these in-
teresting and Ltttle·known paraJlels
awhUe back. as we were celebrating
something called ' ' N a t i o n a 1
Brotherhood Week." It's sadly ironic
that thf' greatest evidence 0 r
"brotherhood" in the 300 years since
the Industrial Revolution has been in
the field of science and technology,
more , than In religion. education.
citlzenshlp, or any other form of
human assocl8tion.
The "progress" we are proudest of
Is the result of col\aboration among
men of many nations. AJthough the in·
strum ent!I devised by sdeoce have
often been used £or conruct. the scien-
tific enterprise itself has always
rested on d broad basis of brotherhood
and the intematlooal exchange or
ideas. help and good Will.
THERE WERE SIX inventors ol the
thermometer. and nine o( t h e
telescot>e -all in dilferent c:ountries.
The:re were four c o n v e r g i n g
Science
disooverers of sunsputs in 1611:
Galileo In Italy, Scheiner in
Germany. Fabricius in Holland. and
~arriott in England.
The important discovery oC the
cellular basis Of both animal and
vegetable tissue was made b y
Schwann, Henle. Turpin, Dumortier,
Purldnje, Muller and V a I e n t I n .
Anestheti~ (both ether and nitrous
<1xide) were discovered in 1845 by no
less than four men or different na-
tionalities.
TWO \'EARS LATER, in 1847, the
law of conservation of energy was
formulated by Joule, T h o m s o n ,
Golding and Helmholz. A method of Ii·
quefylng gases was devised by
Cailletet, Plctet, Wroblowski, and
Olzewski in 1877. The laws of heredity
were worked out by Mendal, De Vries,
Con'ens anu Tschermarck.
The fact that th.is s c i e n t i f i c
brotherhood has worked practically
proves -more than all the idealistic
sermons -that human bein~s are
oapable of advancing themselves only
through active cooperation. not
through hate. envy, bigotry and a~·
gression. Whatever is im.,ortant in
modern living has come from the ef·
forts of men joined In a common
quest : to seek greater knowledge and
welfare for all mankind.
When next we switch on an electric
light. gulp down a vitamin. take a
child's temperature -let us re<:all
some) 0( the names to thank.
Undercover Power Grab
W A S H I N G T 0 N SIA>kely
Carmichael, fiery advocate of racial
rcvoluUoo. bloodshed and destruction
"to bring this country to ill knees," i.s
malting ~vigorou~ grab for control of
t:ie late Dr. Martin Luther King's
''poor people's march" on Washington.
Actively aiding and abetting this a't·
tempted U"nde:rcover power gub are
leading Black Power and allied leftist
elements. tore most among them :
The Student Nonviolent Coordl.natlng
C:>mmittee (SNCC). with dose Com·
munlst lies and formerly beaded by
Carmichael; the Commun\M·f:root W.
E. B. DuBois Clubs ; the Congress oC
RPcial Equality <CORE). headed by
Fl ~yd McKlssick, and Blad: Panthers.
m I ·ant natron.alist organiz.alioo. Also.
re;-iutedly, the Revolutionary Ac&n
~· .vemellt fRA Ml. a trijbly secret ex·
trernist group with O\inese Com-
munist orientation. that preaches
UTban guerrilla warfare to adtieve its
goal -overthrow of Ole U. S. irovem-
ment and rule by Negroes aloog
C»llnese Commuoi$t lines.
•• fie.rye
CAR~DCHAEL AND Max Stanford.
field L'hairman of RAM. have lonl!
worked closely together. FBI Director
J. Edgar Hoover told a Houst Ap·
propriations Subcommittee. ' ' I n
espousing his philosophy of Blad
Power, CarmlchlM!l has been in fre·
quent cootact with Slanforo, and has
afforded the latter assistance anti
l!Uidance in forming a Black Pantht'r Party in New York City ··
Primaf'y &ims of the covert scheme
•o gain Bla<:k Power control of the
"poor people's march" are·
11) Stage a series Of turbulent pro-
paganda d e m o n s t r a t i o n s and
disturba~s In the capital ostefl!Sibly
to "force'' Co n g res s to en.ct far·
reaching multi-billion dollar job-
c:zuting and ur~an ttnewal legisla·
1 tion; 12) estabUsb Oannlcbael u a
'powerful Negro spokesman to en.Ole
him to wi<eld inlluential poUUcal
pre&aure in this yur's momentous n.;i •
tiooat election~.
Syrwnymous
Castro's Cuba refuses to fall apart.
Some 4,000 Cubans a month leave for
the freedom Miami r e p r e s e n t s .
Castro's secret police have jailed
some 10.000 political prisoners -
perhaps more. The American
economic blockade continues to pinch
painfully. But Cuba and Castro remain
synonymous.
Castro has made J?rievous mi11takes.
A huge industrialization program has
proved pretty much an expensive
fallure. The sugar crop. which earns
.
about IJU percent o( the island's foreign
exchange. was neglected. Last year
provided the seeond best iafra, or
harvest. since Castro took over in 1958
-6.1 million tons as against 6.8
million in 1961. But it fell short of a 7.5
million-ton goal.
This year look<; to be worst. The
London su~a~ brok"ra"P firm. C.
Czarnikow. Ltd , estimates the t!rl3
crop at 5.15 million tons. Worse. the
broker says Cuba can't achi,.ve its
suj?ar 11toal of 10 million tons by 1970
without rebuilding some 114 suJ?ar
mills of the 152 in o p e r 1 t i o n
throughout the island.
CUBA I~ TIED to the Soviet Union
by economic assistance of about S400
million a year. A recent visitor.
Ronald Steel. observes: "So long as
Washington remains hostile. t h e
Cubans have to look to Mo-;cow for
their protection. for this is their only
gu;irantee Of SUt'VivaJ."
Castro so far has been una\lle to PX·
oorl his brand of revolution elsrwherP
in Latin ArnPrica. Luis E. A11tui\ar of
f;pnrgetown University s u g lit P s t s :
''The CastroitP theory or revol11tionarv
tacticii that F.rnesto 'Che' G11evari\
and IReeis) Dt'bray were testlnl( i1'
the Bolivian hacklandit ended not onlv
in dea•h for the one And ori~on fnr th"
other but also in ex~un! of th"
weakness Of lhPir crer!O,"
Tlie-LOofers and -Burner
WASHINGTON -They raced
on cat's feet in front of the downtown
store ee.Wng the snappier versions of
Kuppenheimer and Louis Roth men's
clothlng. They were in the 16-18-20
year brackn, Uthe, restless. aware.
A ninth-floor office window across
the street afforded a fine view of their
stalking movements. There were
eight, sometimes 10 or 12 Of them. A
police petrol car stopped and they fad·
ed nol~elessly from view until it had
passed.
They materlali1.oed again. A car halt-
e-d at the curb. went away and then
returned. Then th€ y committed the
act, smashing the windows and esca~
ing to the waiting car with rancy
men's slacks. snappy sports coats and
shirl.9 and other attire to satisfy a
young man's vanity.
THESE WERE THE looters and
burners. In the same general vicinity
a large shoe store was rifled, another
men's clothing store selling popular
brand clothing was looted and burned.
But left untour.hed was the city's
large,,t and most expensive women's
specialty store, several small jewelry ,
stores, several liquor stores -all fill-
ed with articles more valuable and
Hleabte than the sharp togs the
looters wanted.
The vignette of a city in turmoil re·
main' in the mind's eye because the
young. panther-like men fitted the
description of the National Advisory
Commission on Civil Disorders of the
typical rioter as a teen4ger or young
adult alienated fr_om the society in
which he Uves, hating both whites and
the middle class Of his own race,
distrustful Of anything connected with
government, proud, challenging -and
dangerous.
IT WAS N(YI' ALL LIKE that in
Washington. Many of tbe looters were
older, most were employed, relatively
few had criminal records, some work-
ed for the government . some were col·
lege~ucated. AU were caught up in
the mls~uided hysteria ol Martin
Luther King's unconscionable murder.
But those youn' men stalking the
ctottting store fax one's attention
because It is they and those who will
follow them who could make today's
looting and burning merely the
curtaln·raiser of to m o r row ' s
catastrophes, enveloping whole cities
instead of their drab and sordid parts
into which white people rarely ng,ture
except as sightseers alter riots.
The young alienated men are those
to whom Stokely Carmichael spew tn terms of guerilla warflf'e. No other
leader, including Martin Luther King,
has reached them. They long ago re-
jected King, whose leadership along
with his principles Of non-violence was
fading, Md who9e deification may
pro~ to be a strorlfe!' bw than Ilia
living presence.
THE FEDERAL govemment'1 al·
tempts to reach the young and
alienated have been a ludicrous
failure, ending ln such fiascos u that
in Nashville when the y o u n g
firebrands. under g o v e r n m e n l
spon!Orship, taught children the arts
or bating and revolt. Employment pro-
grams for the young alienated have
proved more attractive to middle-aged
women.
One saw in Washington the only
known measure for holding such
elements in check. D I 1 c I p 11 n e.
Military discipline. Passers-by and
police alike stood helplessly and Idly
by while the looting and burning
mounted.
Order was not restored until federal
troops protected the White House and
the Capitol. Mgan to patrol the street.I
and, in effect, sealed off some 300.000
Negroes in their relatively small sec·
tion of this huge metropolitan area un-
der a strict curfew .
PASSAGE OF 0 PEN housing
leplatioo. desirable as that may be,
is not likely to be considered a
realistic solution by the y o u n g
alienated. They are not interested in
buying houses at the moment. The
poverty program, and the <kpartment
of urban housing and development are
at a loss to know how to spend enough
money fast enough to stem the deeply
running emotional and revolutionary
currents in the Negro community.
Obtuse Blindness of Evil
\ '' . ··~ 1: ; '.-= . . "• .... ·~,.)'.~> .T~*f A.. 1,, " .. ,,'ry .. \\.
ol our history that Soutbet:ner1 ~
eeveral generlltiom a r i u e d u-
pensi~ly end violdy ebotlt where
passenge.rs aboWd s.it oo a but or train
or where chlldrf'ft would lit in ICbool.
M£!'tin Lulber King w• a young.
rtlatlvely unknown minist«, lately ar·
rived in Montgomery, ~ Mrs.
Para was arrested. He w• not
present at the first comenince. But
when he did come in, his per1CJ11ality
and ability made him a leader.
SENSELE~. indefensible racist
resJatance OD bus seating continued. It wae. in time. defHted.
nu wu the first ctep. Ia BUm·
inghMft the stupidity of segregat '<I
practices ~leased vicious doe,1 on
cbildNn and women, turned fire hoses
cin them, and othenriae expoeed itl
evil and injustice. Dr. Kmc woo again.
ln Selma ind ln place altD' pl.Ice,
tlils obtuae bllndneaia of e.tl ereated a
atairway up wbicb he climbed.
Tbe height of SCUpidlty ... the kill·
inC -'° tbinlt that death ki1la -idea, a moral force, a legal obliption.
fN THE BACKSTAGE maneuvcrinit
and Jockeying. Carmichael an.1 his
Black PO'ft'r ('()ti >rls are making
mucll of tile fact that he conferred
R'ffrtl times Witt\ 0r. ~ H =-::-:==:=:::::t-tiIDLJi~~'1ij~ij\~jjii=:i"~~~~· ~aty':1-~tb~w Mu ts to ~ ttte-
Dear Doldrum1:
Well, luMe what'• left! I've
pt tff Qatt 1'18dJn1 ..Svice col· .,..,
lmpressioo dlat CmmicnaeJ was one
ol lting'. lielMGa.Dta in oraaawna ab ls
JS'Ojtd
As 1 oonaequeoce ol tht llndercovf'f
,,.., tor ~by 1M 9~ Power
mUJta.nts and the ituUy blt-.Uifd
doubts of moderate Nell'O 1-dm
ebout the advtaab1Ut¥ at the "m.arch,"
ita IUWrt ii wry dvbJOUa • ... ~S.Alln
I l '