HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-04-16 - Newport Harbor Daily Pilott'• at-
' and ' ~crous
II that
~ u n g
nent
.e arts
llt pro•
I have
e-aged
~ only
ruch
11 n e. , and
td Idly
urning
'ederal ,I
se and
streets
300,000
ill sec-
~ea un·
oosing
1ay be,
'red a
oung
rted in
t. The
rtment
!nt are
enough
deeply
tionary uty.
I
ecross
d U•
where
Jr' train
l(bool
Younf,
lely ar·
l Mrs. .. not
~.But
IODality
racist
tmed. It
' Binn· regat'd
op on
·e hoses
ieed itl
i again.
~ place,
eated a
the ltlll·
1111 idea,
"1.
--.. "
. .
~ ..
Today's Closlni
VOL'.. 6 I I NO. 92, 2 SlCTIONS, 22 , .. &ES NcWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1968 TEN CENTS
SIOS~OOO Question
100 Lassies Ask: Where's
.
the Laddie?
By EVELYN SBERWOOD
Of .. 1191¥ "" .... ,
"He went tblit way.''
''l saw him jut a minute ago."
''No, I don't bcnr-.... be ii DOW ...
That's ttie _, lollay qi one of the
largest m,,.,.,._ ln recent bllt«y.
Everybody knows Jobn. Andrews,
the tall, young and bandlome Newport
Beach resident wboee eldef'ly a\JM left
bim i1os,ooo and the lldvice to marrY.
a Scottish lassie to help him manage 1t
thrUtily.
Teens Help
Quell Fire
~ .. . -. --
At .Bay CI
Two alert teenagers today were
credited with spotting a major ti.re rip-
ping through a Balboa Bay Club apart-
ment and imtnediately notifying ttie
Newport Beach Fire 1'epartment.
Firemen said the youttia saw flames
licking from the window of a second
story apartment as they drove put the ·
club on Pacific Coast Highway about
11 a.m.
The boys ooti.fied a 9eC'Urity guard
at the posh bayside t!Omplex, then
dashed to tbe apartment and aper-ailed
fire extinguishers until fir'&men •·
riv~ lllOCDenta later,
'"Aley of;Maus)J MJped lac.I' .• ..._
the blaze.'' said BMtaficii t'Mef Ph1I
Hayden.
"'he johnnies-a~ were Iden·
tified as Randy Archbold. ol 18611
Bartlett Drive, Htmtingtm Beldl, lftd
his friend , Tom Morris, wbose address
was not obtained.
The babtalion chief s;rid two firemen
suffered minoT bums in fighting the
blaze, but neither W1lS badly hurt.
Bay Club officials ~ unable to
identify the apartment resident. The
main club office does not keep an up-
to-date mas-ter list of tenants, ooe of·
ficial told the DAILY PILOT.
~ apartmeta evJdentl:y was empty
when the flaJDel broke out and cause
of the ~ was .u11 under invelltigati.on
at 1 p.m. Damere wuexpecU!d to bit
several tbouJ.llM dollars.
Only one ap81"trneN WM damaged
by names but sioot.e damaged an
outside 1t'alkway and nearby balcony.
Schools lose
$400 Equipment
• Thieves w.alked away with more
than $400 in equipment from two
Newport Beach elementary schools,
police were told Monctay.
School officials said I $100 sound
projector was tak~n frOD> Newport
Elementary School, 1400 W. Balboa
mvd .. and a '319 tape recorder with
speakers was stolen from Horace
Ensign School, 2000 Cliff Drive.
Police said entry was made into
Newport Elementary through an
unlocked door; and Ensign School
through an unlocked lrindow.
Weatller
Sunny and warmer, says fore-
caster John AJdrtcb of tomor·
row's weather pictW'e on the
Orange Coasl Look for a blah
of 68 along the aea11hore aDd up
to 70 further in.land.
INSmE TODAY
1 • ,.n
" " , , .,
1' ... ,
" •• " •
But nobody knows where he ls.
TM HUOO John is wlded, ol
coune. is so he can read through a
~ or letters from more than 100
girk in Scot!lnd who have written
matrimonial JX'oposals to him.
Not that the· girls are too forward or
ooything. John asked them to write.
He wrote ttle lord provost pl
Dundee, Alexander MacKenzie, seek· me help in finding a blonde or redhead
between 18 and '1:1 for a wife, ac·
cording to dispatches from Glasgow,
Scotland.
"John is always on the move,'' his
younger brotller, Steve , said toda, at
the family home, 2024 15th St,, ln
Newport.
..We didn't ~now anything aboul tbe
o!fer to marry a ScoWsh girl, l
news was a sUTprise to us ."
Then he added, "We would be glad C
he married any girl."
Steve already has taken the plunge,
bu; 25-year-old brotber Johtl is busying
himself in bacllelorbood, writing a
novel.
This mudl ls known about the
elusive Scot: John is a native of
Newport Beach. he was graduated
from Newport Harbor Hip School in
J961, attended Orange Coast College,
then c:ipplied for a real est.ate ap·
praiser's liceme before setting out on
his current writing project.
While the girls in Scotland send. pro-
J>(\'ials to their California prince, his
''ruyal majesty" remains in hiding. ms parents in the past 24 hours
have been besieged by a growing
army of newspaper reporters and
telecasters seeking interviews with
their boy.
Though he makes his home with his
fol.ks, they're in the dark as well. "We
are sorry the word got out." his
mol'ber said. today. "John is un·
predictable."
A neighbor woman who said she has
known John for the past hall dozen
years, described him as "really an
educated boy. He is very loving and
very kind. He's just a very nice young
man.
''And he's popular with the girls too,
but be isn't too crazy about them . He's
always been busy with a lot of pro-
jects.
"He and a friend were mining Jor
gold fur a while, but right now I don't
know what he 's doing," the woman
said.
Reagan May Run
SACRAMENTO <UPI) -Gov.
Ronald Reagan -in a major position
change-made it clear today he Is re-
assessing his own presidential pro·
sµects but lhat he won't become an ac·
live candiate for the Repul.>lican
nomination.
"The job seeks the man." he told
newsmen after his reguli-r weekly 30·
mjnute news conference.
The California governor. who ha>
repeatedly insisted in the past that he
Johnson Urges
Ear~y Response
Froln N. Viets
F'rnm WirP Senices
HONQLULU -President Johnson,
pressing Hanoi for an early and
serious response to Vietnam peace ef·
1 forts, also is bearing oc wn on m.ilitary
problems in conferences at the U.S.
Pacific command post.
Johnson's scheduJe today centered
on a visit to the hilltop headquarters of
Adm. U.S. Grant Sharp, the Pacific
commander in chief who will retire in
July. The President said be wanted to
talk about the military situation in
Vietnam with Sharp and h i s
design ated successor. Adm. John S.
McCain.
The President gave North Vietnam
a new peace prod Monday. sooo alter
arriving in Honolulu.
JUST IN TIME -Newport Beach firemen scamper up ladder to ~et
to . Balboa Bay Club apartment blaze shortly before noon today. Fire
in new apartment addition was spotted by two teen-agers who helped
pot it out. Rooms were unoccupied at the time .
As friends and critics vied for al·
tention with shouts. chants and
placards -th e friends clearly were
more numerous -Johnson reviewed
peace efforts in an ..lddress from the
steps of lolani PaJace, seat of the
Hawaiian government. These eHorlS
focus at this stage on findinl'! a
mutually a c c e p t a b 1 e preliminary
meeting site.
Declaring .. precious lime is being
los.t." Johnson said :
''For us, this is not a propaganda ex-
ercise. We have sent serious and con·
sidered messages aimed at bringing
about the earliest possible contact. Attra~tive Notion
CofC Backs Beautification Division
Newport Harbor Chamber ol Coml
merce directors Monday unanimously
approved creaU-0n of a new chamber
dMston -Newport Beautiful.
Isabel Pease, who recommended it,
calls it an "idea factory."
1'1le di~ion will produce Ideas on
bow to make Newport Bead\ "even
more ci.n, neat orderly and •l·
tr1ct1Ye than it is," said Mrs. Pease,
the community's foremost beautl!ica·
• Uon leader. . "We 're already beginning to look
pretty good." ste told chamber direc-
tors et their m<1nthy luncheon. "But
we1ve sWl got some 10re spots. Let's
clean 'em up." .
She aakl the purpm of the d.lvis1on
-the chamber's ttlird -will be to
combine Into one fNUP a I I
men -
~ "file ii. out ell· vlrOameat. ••
groups. We'll 9end out communication~
and ideas on such things as plant ing
trees, removing trash cans from the
streets. pushing anti~ign ordinances
-we'll.be an k1ea factory."
Mrs. Pease, the chamber's Citizen
of the Year a few years ago,. em·
pbasized that Ne';fport Beautiful would
work dosely with city agencies.
Dr. Richard Underwood, in movin~
that ttie chamber boa.rd sponsor the
new division, emphulzed:
"We asaume tflat Mrs~ Pease wi ll
!pear bead It.''
Chamber President Leon Meeks said
Underwood's assumptioo wa1 oorrect.
Mrs. Pease I~ expected to start
orga!'lzln1it Newport Beautiful im·
is not and does not expect to become a
candidate f<n-president, appeared to
move a step closer to responding lo
any "grass roots" movement.
He noted that GOP strategist F~
Clifton White. principal architect of
Barry M. Goldwater's 1964 GOP
nominaUon drive. had reported an in·
crease in grass roots activity favoring
the California governor around the na·
tion.·
· "Ob vioulsy, I was interested in
hearing that,'' he told his news con-
ference.
Later, when a newsm~n asked why
he f o u n d it interesting, Reagan
replied : ''Wouldn't you be interested?
I can't comment until I know how
much it means -until 1 know if two
other counties have joined the parade.
"I'm not going to go away and pre-
tend it isn't bappen.ing. Of course l'm
going to evaluate it."
Master Plan Asked
Upper Bay 'Friends'
Fret Over Development
By BRUCE BENSON
Of l~t Dally Pllol Stall A smc.iJJ headwind of opposition In
currem development plans for Upper
Newport Bay blew into town Monday
Man, 62, Youth
Hm·t in Crashes
A 62·year·old Costa Mesa man an<l a
Santa Ana teena~r were in1ured in
separate one-car crashes in Newport
Bea<ih Monday .
Virgil Joseph Judy. of 467 Flower
St.. Costa Mesa, suffffed serious head
injuries when his 1966 Mustang, north·
bound on Riverside Avenue. slammed
into a parked car nt'ar 15th St.
Judy. wh.o was in Hoag Memorial
HospHal's intensi ve care unit th.is
mommg, told officers that he "jus1
blacked out" prior t<> the crash.
Less seriously hurt earlier in ~e
day was Lance Quick Holston, 16. of
Santa Ana.
Holston's 1963 Corvair swerved out
of control as it headed north on
MacArthur Boulevard near Ford
R-0ad. It rolled over, endfog right side
up on ttie side of the road. The you th
suffered a spl'ajned neck. He was
treated at Hoag and released.
night. It could whip up into an outright
gale.
A band of concerned citizens. calling
themselves "Friends of the Bay·•. held
the first of what they promised will be
many public forums on the projected
uses and potential misuses of Upper
Bay.
Among several pointed que&tions
they posed were these:
-If Upper Newport Bey I s
developed . what guaran<ees are there
that the lower bay will remain unaf·
fected ?
-Would lhe lower bay become
turbid? Would its waters become more
polluted'.'
-Wi th 4.000 more boats in the Up.
per Bay. how can they be absorbed in·
to weekend. lr<!ffic' slrea ming in and
out oft.he harbor's neck at the jetty?
Principal speaker was Wesley Mau,
a writer who moved to Newport Beach
with his family about a year and a half
ago from Malibu.
He has written extensively on
marine problems. and is the author of
"The Frail Ocean". a work dealing
with the con..5ervation and exploitation
of. ocean resources.
Marx said Upper Newport Bay in it\
(See UPPER BAY, Pace%)
Mn. Pease said'Newport Beautiful
would undertake to OOorcilnafe pro-
ject.I and programs similar to thote aomored by Los Attteles Be.-utltul,
CoutJded 18 years &go . ·•we want (O ·aet a up a pattem uua. to tbetn. We'll Mn with a ...U deerinl commtuee, then tnnch
out to various .ctvilory aod interest
NEW YORK (AP) -'n'ie 1tock
market sboWed a 1cramb1ed picture
lh1s afttrnoon as losses by blue chips
dtaggtd <town n~a1e even as 1aln<1
far outnumbered loeses in fJ'ie over·all
list. Tradlng was actlve. (Sie quota·
Uont, Pllfl M ) ..
The market backed IWIY rrom 11
clear-cut ga.ln In the mornl~g.
Jn what can beat be described as total &&&rprise, Roger w. Hardacre cbalrman of the f'.tewport ~ch Ubrary board or. trustffa, ~ctpb $1,000
check from Mrs. L. W • .Heather (left), president
of Friends of the Library. Head Ubrarlan Dorothea
SbM\y Crilhtl aaid money wW ao toward·~•
library auato-vlsual department.
... 1.
I
------------..
•
2 DAil Y PllOT
Telephone
Workers'
Strike Seen
Supervtsory personnel are ready to
man switchboards Thursday if some
2,300 unicn-represented Oran1e County
Pacilic Telephone employes walk out
m a contract wagt dispute as ex-
pected.
About 2 3 . O O O communications
workers throughout the Southland are
voting today on whether lo strike al 3
p. m. Thursday and union leaders say a
strike v:>te ls virtually certain.
·'What they wW be prepared to do,
however. is anybody's sues• now,"
?acilic Telephone D 1 1 tr I c t Com-
1nercial Manager Streeter King told
I.he DAILY PILOT today.
lutsday, April 16, 1968
By THOMAS FORTUNE Of .. De.., ,,... ....
"It's pntty ob\<lous this school
district has a bouaiJ\I p?'Oblem that
n~ds immediate attention," Dr.
William L. Cwmlnfbam, new Newport-
Me&a dlltrict superintendent said to-
day.
On a wh.lrhrind , one day vtait to the
Harbor Area. Cunnlnaham said he
doesn't yet have the perspective to
propose a solution.
He said, however, "I thJnk every
child· deserves a full day of achoo!."
The reference was to double sessions
!or aJJ second graders ne11 tall
In an lntervi~w with the DAJLY Pnm. Cun.nln&}l•m said, • • T h e
scboola be&out to a eonnnnity. and a
superintendent is obligated not only to
listen to but to seek out the attitude or
the community."
He was to hold a general press con·
ference this afternoon. During the day.
Cunningham met wjth central office
adminJstrators and school principals.
Ton.ight he will attend the school board
meetinic.
Cunnln..,am, pneentb' 1Ul*'in-
tendent of lfl)'W~ Unified School
Dl&trtct. laJt nlgbt re<:elved hJs
release from the Hayward school
board. Ht is to bt allowed to &pend
half 111' tlme getti.n1 acquainted with
hit eew poeition until bia contnct eir.
pires June ~.
Cunningham said oot to expect iJn.
mediately any major changes ht
district practices. "Jt • o u I d
presumptuous for me to come In anrt
recommend major changes," be said.
"This district bu a gooc1 reputation
statewide."
Cunninpam bas a rtputation for
working with the cammunity lo win
support for h acbool program. He
promised to do the same here.
Orange County employes a r e
1epresented by the Federation of
Women Telephone Workers, the Com-
1nunioations Workers of America, tbe
Order of Repeater and Toll Testboard,
•llKi the International Brotherhood of
Credit Card
Thefts Trap
Four Youths
They Wanted Vote
C:lectrictl Workers.
Not au of the employes are
aecessarily union members, Kln1 said.
Heights Residents Sore
·.
OAILY "ILOT 11919 ,,_.... The scheduled strike would idle
about 200,000 tele~e operators in 17
states. but 15,000 employes of~ New SCALE MODEL BUil T -Costa Mesa's first skyscraping structure,
Jersey Bell Telephone Co. struck three Bethel Tllwers, is slowly being built on oil-duty hours of fireman Four San Die10 youths weM ar·
At Annexation Shelving
.lays a.head of schedule Monday. Leroy "Ozzie" Ozanne {right) based on blueprints being checked rested on for.gery charges Monday
Supervisory personnel there stayed by Capt. Gerald Poarch (left), assistant training officer. The intri-after a credit card purchase at a Now that the move afoot for
.>n the job and said there was oo in-cate model wiU be used to help train firemen in high-rise structure Balboa Island shop. Newport Beach to annex part of Santa
terruplion of service to 2.2 million fires. Construction makes such buildings tow in fire hazards, but Newport Beach police said the Ana Hei&hta bu tripped over a
customers. although some calls were furnjshings are inflammable. credit card was one of seven s1olen in strange soUDdinf body called the Local delayed during peat business hours. a recent car burglary. Agencv Formatlon Comm is s Ion
Union members in most of Northern Taken into custody at 2 p.m. as their <LAFC ), what happens next?
California and Nevada have voted car beaded out of town on East Co.st Nothing for a while. with a little
about 6-1 to strike Thursday noon Ta' II F • o d Highway at Morning Canyon Road luck. agamst the Pacific Telephone Co., ac· ire r er were Nicholas E. Delmark. 20 ; Karen Many residents ln the Heighta todav
cordir.g to Jack Santen. rresident of MJchaels. 19; GUbert M. Parada, 21. were still plainly miffed at the LAFC
fhe AFL-CJO C o m m u n c a t i o n s and Kathleen Walten, 20. for denying annexation bids by Costa
Workers of America in tbe East Bay. . Delmark was booted on a 1orgery· -Mela-and Ne~Jast week.
-Mtm!' t.nan--35,oot-'"nlter hact--t>een---~t -~LA: ._ -~ ---~ ~ -~....t< -~h!rtt;-ihe-~~mtlt=== Tbet:!',!!lad .Jo_ ~-1.Q...LYAt.t how
cwnted Mooday . Sat1ternald. ·--mestf'·-.:::::rr11Jsera:per ruSlfS ~rnF conspiracy. BaJI was .et ai ~.ooo many peopltm S-~DOOd
OnJy votes of the San Francisco against each.
local remained to be cast. and he By ARTHUR R. VINSEL manualJy on a special key system to Police said Delmark used a stolen
predicted that the outcome, with 5,500 Of ,,_. 0.lly ..... , Stefl prevent mallunction -leav\ng re1ular Bankamericard at the Persimmon ,,,... r.,e J
members ballo~ng, would be about the How could firefighters s a v e elevators for resi~nt evacuation. Tree on &lboa Island to purcb•e a UPPER BAY same there as m the other areas. hr Id pl 'd ts d . dress for one of the girls. A clerk Already in were returns from locals t eatened e e. y rest en an con The manucil system u neceS&ary b ,_ed 'th b ,_ Hl lal h • • •
I flam " bl h uJd t · h c ec... wt a an& o c , owever, 9415 jn the East Bay, 9421 in tro es u a aze s o erup m because heavy smoke can block t e and learned the card was. stolen.
Sacramento alld 9490, which includes 18-story Bethel Towers. Costa Mesa's electric eye devices used ln the Police were called.
membership from South San Fran-first high-rise apartment building? automatic elevator systems , trapping By then the four suspect.. had fled
clsco to Bakersfield. The job -IC it comes -will involve firemen on one floor. the shop ~th the dresa
The main issue In the dispu~. many problems.
locally and nationw;de, is an 18-month The Costa Mesa Fire Department. SPECIAL PACKS
wage reopeUJ1g clause in a three-year however. is currently malting detailed During the fl"xposure phase o( the
contract. plans for the possible day when flrl!flghtlni. Capt. Coleman says. the
The CWA is demanding a pay in· engines will go screaming to the men may carry 50 foot lengths of hose
crease of some 10.5 percent for the massive concrete structure, tallest in 1n specitl back packs into the building.
next year and a half. The compa.ny Orange County. "The lellows never go onto the fire
Ms offered 6. 7 percent. Borrowin.R from p r o .R r a m s floor ," be explains, "if the fire broke
Ma n-agement said its boosts could developed in C>t.her cities. Capt. Ron out on the 16th floor. they would hook
range from $4.50 to 121 weekly per Coleman. training oflicer, is planning up hoses on the 14th floor and la y lines
worker. classroom stud.Jes and practice drills. up the stairway toward the fire.''
The poss1ble work &toppage in to prepare penonnel for hlih·rise The c o n f i n e m e n t and ex·
Southern California ~ould o~r even firefighting. tinguishment phases involve stopping
thou~ the 11 locals Wl the re~1on are He also hopes to conduct a drill in the fire from spreadlng. and .a fog
working under a cootract which does the 270-unit retirement home before nonle wbkb sprays a dense mist is
not expire i.mW May 12. occupants begin movini l.n after its normally used inste£d of a solid
completion In mid-July. stream of water.
'Damn Yankees'
To Be Presented
At Harbor High
Pardon the language -but Newport
Harbor High School students are now
rehearsing "Damn Yankees."
The musical will be presented by the
drama and music departments April
28 and rt at Harbor High'• auditorium,
school officials announced today.
It's a two-act one-time Broadway
smash by Richard Adler and Jerry
Ross. and is based on the Douglass
Wallop book. "The Year the Yankees
tost lhe Pennant."
The book was written before the
Yankees s~ losing pemiants, going away. •
The Harbor High cast Includes AnnP
Foss as Meg : Dave Van Houten as Joe
Boyd; 'T'en-y Hammon as Joe Hardy:
John Carlton as Applegate : Diana
Gray as Lola: Steve SJmmons as Van
Buren: Jerry Brown as Rocky: Nick
Furt.icella as Vernon: 8111 Wolfe as
Smokey and Pat Gunkier as Gloria.
Among songs are "What Ever Lola
Wants. Lola Gels." "You Gotta Havt'
Heart." "Two Lost Souls" and
"Shoeless Joe."
DAILY PILOT
...,.. ...... c ....
l.w+ M. W..4 ......
This minimizes water damage to
3 BASIC PROBLEMS carpeting and furniture. pltU making
The three basic problems confTont the final overhaul phase e.Wer for
firemen when names break out in a weary firefighters, who <ire physically
rugh-rise bulldlng but there is also a taxed more in high-rise blazes than in
basic technique in handling each ordinary ones. says Capt. Coleman.
among five phases of the operation. He also sa.vs manpower becomes a
"We're literally faced with a city problem in fighting skyscraper fires .
stood on ~nd." says Capt. Coleman in because of the olhet compltcating fac·
describing It. tors to be faced.
The three basic problems involve
finding the fire . getting equipment to
that location and actually tight.ill& the
blaze on the scene.
Five phases must be covered in the
process, code-titled RECEO. f o r
Rescue, Exposure. Confinement. Ex-
tingulshmenl and Overhaul. according
u Capt. Coleman.
Building requiremenL~ for modern
skyscrapers -whose steel and con-
crete construction definitely lessens
the lire hazard -are designed to ht'llp
ftremen as much as possible in th e
event of a blaze.
HOSE LlNES A'M'ACRED
H01Se Unes are immediately attached
to dry stt'tl<I pipes In such buildings, so
water gushes into the vertical main~.
which can be tapped al any level.
''It's like having a hydrant on every
floor," says Capt. Coleman.
A ve.sUbule at the bottom of the es.4't
~U in the 185-foot building on
19th Street neat" Pomona Avenue
would al.so channel fumes up through
the roof.
"The thing that llills people in a Ure
is smoke and heated gases," says
Capt. Coleman.
PRACTICE DRILL
Capt. Coleman and his assiatant
training officer Capt. Gerald Poarch,
recently observed a praot:ice drill on
th1: 15th floor of a building In Los
Angeles ' Cen-tury Ctty. which required
45 men .
Any lnitlaJ attack on a fire at Bethel
Towers would involve about 15 men .
he says. but off-duty personnel coulcl
be called in. as well as units from sur-
rounding cities
Capt. Coleman said one reason he
hopes for a drill in the big buildinit
before It is occupied. Is to practlct' thr
rspeclally slrict command and control
required.
F,ach fireman has an assigned dut ~·
and many men would be scatterert
:iround inside the structure, makini;t
communlcatlon and orders particular-
ly difficult. he explained.
The captain is using sOme materials
complled by Los Angeles Fn Depart·
ment Battalion Chief Ben Renfro, who
is one of the nation's leadin~
authoritfo-; on blgh·rlse firefighting.
LOFT HOSE LINES
.A rew deparbnents UM heUcopter~
to loft hose Uoes \nto the alr on
skylC1'!:lper rires, a met.bod endorsecl
hy Chief Renfro. but Costa Me~a
wouldn 't nted one for many years .
Mesa's Marina
Site Auction
Slated Thursday
Auction sale of the site ot the '90
million keys Marina. one planned for
Costa Men, bas been reacbeduled for
Thursday. following postponement one
month ago.
Bidders on the 144-acre property
•a1oni the Santa Ana River pn each
side of Victoria Street will 1atber at
1 :30 p.m. Thursday at the Newport
Harbor Elks Lodge.
The ambitious marina c<>mmunJty of
821 lots once re:iched the state at
wh1cb a tentative tract map was ap-
proved for subdlvi.sion by the Costa
Mesa Planning Commission.
The development, however. has ap-
parently been abandoned.
Start of construction was originally
scheduled for early 19S7, but Louil
Les~ Enterprises, owntn ot the
land, quietly sold it to Western Orbls
Co .. of Los Angeles.
Costa Mesa cJty ofticlals said
Western Orbis never contacted them
concerning fate of the 144 acres of
laod.
A three-year series of teuibilJty
studies was made prior to actual
scheduled development ot the pro-
perty. wb.ich would have given
landloclted Costa Mesa a route to the
sea.
It was thw subject of much heated
opposition by some )andlowners and
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach city
officials met several times to discuss
problems the marina would faet.
present natural state serves four ma·
jor functions:
The bey i.s a repository of silt from
inland; 1t cleanses and ~ polluted
inland water pastiDg through to the
lower bay and ocean; it is an ~x
tensive wil~ Hbitat. and flndly. its
open space provides aestlletk relief
for a backdrop ol urbanizatJon.
Marb Hid ill considered dttdgi.ng.
rechannellng and bulkheadlng could
al~er ttie bay's balance with nature
and lead to some highly undesirable
consiequences. For one thine. modifkation ol the
bay lnto a ttraiatiter main channel
could reduce it.I capacity for absorb-
iilg silt .tuiced fr-om inlaod.
CEMENT CURTAIN
For another, "a cement curtain of
bulkheadlng will lltmally expropriate
the natural habitat," he sald.
"A plan has been proposed here. and
it 1ust hasn't been checked out with
nature,'' he said.
Marx and otben at the meet..lng said
they are seeking approval of a
thorough muter plan for the bay
before dredlfnl begins.
"'MM Upper Bay \a ~orming IO~ very import.ant technieal functions,"
he ooatinued. "It serves a cleansing
f.uctkJn and keept the lower bey
waten pure.
"A.a IS'blbaition increases, lilt
loads from Inland are golng to in-
crease, making the bay's drainage
capabllltiea that much more lm·
porttant."
Another member ol the Friends of
the Bay identified bttself as Mrs.
Howard Babb.
She Mid flood control channels now
emptytns Into the bay draill a "atac·
gerlnf area" of 89,000 ac~~
BRING SILT
"They are known lo bring in a good
amount of alll. occasional effluent
from treated aewage plants. a.Dd high
preferred remaining in unincorporated
territory as opposed to becoming part
of Newport Beach.
The LAFC denied permission to both
cities to proceed with annexation
plans. So residents in the area cannot
vote on the matter and will remain un-
der Orange County jurisdiction.
.. r don't think that as a group, we 're
going to take any action right now."
• saitte:-fr. ~a?dt'1r)n'eJUber:nLUiL -
Peguus Home-owners Association an-
nexation committee. when asked what
his next move will be.
"I think the next move is up to
Newport Beach to see if they want to
go ahead and do anything on it. then
resubmit the idea to the LAFC."
Reinhardt sajd be thought the LAFC
should have told Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach to work out com·
paUble annexation bids, then resubmit
their applications.
Another Pegasus H o m e o w n e r "
member. Mrs. Peter P. Andrews. said
she was •·extremely disappointed"
when the LAFC turned down the an·
nex bids.
She sald that the LAFC refusal to let
people in the area vote one wav or
another denied them the benefit of
''due democratic choice." She pointed
out that at least SO percent or the pro-
perty owners had-petitioned in favor of
the NeWl>Ort annexation.
The LAFC wiu set uo only lo decide
tf annexation plans follow orderly and
lo~ical boundaries. LAFC members
told both cities to withhold their plans
until an Orange County Airport
master plan is comoleted.
Newport Beach Plannin~ Director
Ernest Mayer. Jr .. said he doesn't ex-
pect a11v renewed effort by Newport to
annex thP area for at least a year.
nitrogen levels. which can cause
serious alg.e prob*ns.
"One of the channels runs throu&h
the lncreuingly industriallud Orange
County Airport area and some in·
du strial seepage may possibly be ex·
pected in the future.''
Sbe said it is probable that "OoodJnJ!
and seepage wlU increase with In·
creased land usage around the lower
and the upper bays since that brin11s
with it increcased soil disturbance, in·
creased run oU. and increased
disposal of various forms of waste."
She said a c o m p r e h e o 1 i v e
master-plan Is essel1lial not just for thl"
bay. but for au draining land and
receivinc wattta involved.
"Land use and water use simply
cannot be sepwated," &tie aai<I.
n-.t K..,... ...
n.....:.J;.~""'
...,_. P.Cein.t ............ atf....,
JMk .. c.tey , ........
The atairwell con.struction would
er.able residenu to leave Bethel
Towers during the rescue phase
without btlng expoled to these poten·
tially fatal fumes.
capt. Coleman alao .. ys •firemen
work.int a hJgb-rlM bla:&e use onl y
service elevators -o p e r a t e d
Capt. Coleman's study pack•1e will
bt ~pplemented by a acale model of
the 11-story structure, abowbig floor
plana, atairwllrs and other Interior
detalla ot s.thel Tower1 ..
In CAltPET CLEANING
THIS UNIQUE NEW PROCESS CLEANS DEEP
AND m TREATS THE FINEST CARPETS WITH
LOVING CARE ..• ..._.._., M:eMw .......
............... 0..
2111 We4 1-i~ .....
..... ~ '.0. .. 117192661 °""' OM... c... ............... ... "-............ _
~ 91Ml\1 -• ..,..
I -' ~~ ~ •
Jaycees Gry the J;llues
Over Bal Week Dances
119 ~ted that PoUce Cb)ef B.
JUMI Ytll WU obrioull)' Cor:rtct ta ..,... all JUf'a Bal W.U erowd
WU the -Dicest in )'Mn, and llto tbe
•llrmDelt.. WMt lftcllcated that's the end or
J~ apoaocal\lp of Bal Week
danctt -fore9'f.
"AU we ca do now I• rerroup and
If .,. ca11 mue our tcbolanhtl"
moeey el.Mwhfft, •• ht aald.
.., ITIAM ,..._..a..._ Mtti ... ef"' Mr11Sf _."' ..,........,.n,....._ ...... ~ ........... ~ .... ... ' -.............. ...,.. ,... "'!'"*"" .. ., ftUlll ..... .,_ ...,_ ....... I ••....., -.. l1ftt ...................... .... ..... ..... " ...................... ..._ ..,., .......... . =.... ........................... ...,.. ...... ......
THIS DH, STIAM NOCISS II OUARANnlD TO II COMPLITIL y SAFI ON ALL
'AlllCS UNDll ALL CONDITIONS.
••••
AUO IN LONG llACH "90 CHllUtY AVI.
.. •J
,.
t iJn.
s irt
uld
, anti
said.
ation
I for
win
. He
[)
J
.g
·ated
part
beth
ation
mnot
nun-
•e're
ow~:·
.!J1ii::
n an.
what
p to
nt to
then
.AFC
and
com-
bmit
er s
said
1ted"
! an-
:o let
v or it of
.nted
pro-
lr of
:cide
and
1bers
>Jans
rport
tclor
t ex-
1rt to
:a use
ough
ange
! in·
! ex·
KlinJ?
1 In·
OW Pr
rings
:, in·
~sed
e."
iv e
r tht
and
mply
I
TuttdQ, Aprtl 16, 1968 DAJL Y PJLOT 3
l(illg Probe Hits Snag
FBI, Polic~ W oiidering Wlio ls Eric Galt?
Male Rep~e• Mall
I
There was no froxy needed this time as new bridegroom Carl Thomas
Gunter, 21, o Little Rock, Ark., placed the wedding ring on the
finger of the former Donna Osborn, 18, himself Monday in Westmin·
ster. A mailman had filled in for Gunter in slipping the engagement
ring on her finger early in March.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP}-Dead·
end cl'*81 to a man who vankbed
without a trace apparently eonhated
FBI agents today in tbeir ~ption
ol tbe anlper alaylnc af Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. ..
False leads multiplied ln the bunt
for Eric Starvo Galt, a mylt.rlous qutet~talklng man wtlo1e lut known
address was a Birmingham rooming
house. His former landlord said Mon·
day be bad identified drawinga tbown
by FBI a1ents u resembllnl. Erle
Galt
"It's him," sald Peter Cberpes, 72,
who rUDJ a two-story Southside
boarding house wbe~ a.o Eric c.it llv·
ed for six weeks last fall
Galt'a abandoned white Muatang
was impounded tut 1bunday by tbe
FBI in Atlallta. It flt tbe description of
a car seen leaving the scene afteT Ki~g was killed April 4 by a aniper fir•
Ing from a rooming house in Memphis,
Te.M.
Memphis wiwesses described the
2 U.S. Jets Lost
' In. Raid on North
SAIGON (AP) -The U. S. Com-penetration a strike by Navy bombers
mand announced two American planes on a causeway one mile below the
were shot down OVff North Viet.nim's parallel.
southern panhandle MondEI)', and a Other attacks were made on supply
spokesman suggested the Communists routes, antiaircraft sites, and truck convoys.
may be moving more antiaircraft guns Over South Vietnam, Air Force B52
soutt. to counter tbe increase in bombers flew rune missions against
S T• h c II American boJllbing there. enemy build·up, supply, service and enate ig tens 0 ege . Both planes, Alr for~ Fl05s, were rec~perration areas along the Cam-
hlt near Dong H.o~, ~bout 40 miles bodJan border 56 to 59 miles northwest
ncrlh of the de.militar~ zone. The of Saigon and in the A Shau Valley
spokesman s~d antiaircraft fire west of Hue.
suspected assassin, who registered as
John Willard at a rooming houe op-
posJte King's mot.el, as about six feet
and sandy-haired and "a clean, neat
man ...
No trace or W1llard has apparently
been found.
An FBI alert for Eric Starvo Galt in
a white Mustang was issued in Florida
last Thursday, but was canceled.
However, the Jt'BI has continued a
sea.reb for Gall's whereabouts, or clues
P• 00. arc und Dong Hot was extremely heayy South of the A Shau Valley .in the
_:p; . . e-~ possibly tha....ue.m.y-bad been ~ .::renttalbigh~ ... ~~
.I. ~ stillirig niw weapom posilloiism"lhe attack was re~ted near th~ Cam-• ' pan~ndle ar~. bodian border and a U.S. spokesman
From Wlre Services Senate subcommittee that investigated
performance of "The Beard."
Wh tie President Johnson halt,ed U. warned '"This is a potentially hot u~1 T••11m
S. bombing north ol the 20th Pau.Ue l area." Net" Aflortion Bill
SACRAMENTO - A Senate probe
into staging of the play "The Beard"
at Cal State Fullerton has resulted In a
vote for tigher legislative control
ever state college trustees.
on April 1 in an attempt to open peace After a heavy five-minute mortar
discussions with Hanoi, U. S. pilots barrage. the enemy "opened up from Appointment or state c o 1 l e g e
trustees, who select c o I J e g e
presidents, does not now require con-
firmation.
have more than doubled their usual all sides" with automatic weapons and
number of daily raids on the panhan· small arms Monday on a company of
die. American infantrymen.
The two planes lost Monday rs.tsed The Americans pulled back to their A vote to make the governor's ap-
pointment of trustees subject to
Senate two-thirds confirmation was
approved unanimously, 33 to 30 by the
Senate Monday.
Whebnore's commlttee earlier saJd
allowing the play, Cilled with sex
words and a simulated sexual act, to
be performed on the campus showed
the need for tougher control over col-
lege authorities and t r u s t e e s .
However, there was no mention of the
controversial play during Monday's
floor debate.
the total number lost in the air war patrol base half a mHe south of the
against North Vietnam to 823. They spot where they came under attack in
were the first planes reported down in mountainous jungle 19 miles west of
the North in two weeks, since an Air Kontum City and ts miles from the
The measure, authored by Sen.
James E. Whetmore CR·La Habra).
now goes t.o an uncertain fate in the
Assembly. Whetmore headed a special
Fore~ F4 was dcrNlled April 2 the day Cambodian border.
after Jobnson's curtallment order.
Members of the special committee
also had endorsed a constitutional
amendment cutting into the UC Board
of Regents power.
One of the pilots, Col. David W. B h M d Winn, 44, of Minneapolis, Minn., eaC UJ• er
maneuvered his crippled plane out
over the South China Sea, blllled out at
18,000 feet, and be w.as picked up by a
"jolly green giant" hell.copter. Man Kills Wife,
Three Children,
Dies in Blaze
FRESNO (UPI) -A Fresno man
appatently killed his wife and three
children today and then committed
suicide by setting fire to the family's
wood Crame house.
The Fresno Police Department said
the family wa5 tentatively identified
only 'llS "Martinez."
Police said two of the children were
garroted and the third suffocated in a
plastic bag, and Ute mother bad been
stabbed. The reason for the mass
murder wcu not immediately known.
Firemen were called to the scene of
a blaze at the family's North Fresno
home at 6 a.m. They believed at ftr6t
all five were killed in the fire, but
later discovered the mother and
children had died earlier.
Firemen said the bwe definitely
was arson. They said the father ap·
parently poured gasoline over himself
and around the house and lighted it. A
gasoline can was found in the debrb.
Sta nton Policeman
Suspended 3 Days
A StaDton poUce oCficer who
evidently kept too many diaries hu
been suspended fur three days by City
Aaministrator Johnston Craig.
Mayor Frank Kohl said Sgt. Tom
Patton. a six.year veteran of the
force. reportedly "had remarks in a
diary tbat were not quite right."
It calls for terms o{ UC regents to
be cut from 16 years to 8, requires a
two-thirds confirmation vot.e oo ap-
pointrnenu, and allows removal o{
regents by a two-thirds Senate vote.
But it appears stymied by Jack of
votes and was sent back to committee
Monday.
Regents now have almost total con-
trol of the University under provisions
of the State Constitution.
The pilot of t1e other p~ was
listed as missing in act.loo.
Overcast skies spawned by Ute
lingering northeast monsoons limited
U S. pilots to 88 missions against
North Vietnam Monday. a big drop
from Ute 143 the day before.
For the 12th consecutive day, the
American bombers stayed below the
19th Parallel, with the northernmost
Sex Waterll
It's From Yugoslavia-With Love
BELGRADE (UPI) -It is sickly
yellow and tastes stale, but so-called
"sex water'' bubbling from a remote
well ln the Bosnian Mountains might
replace Slivovltz as Yugoslavia's main
beverage export.
The water, known to local residents
as muska voda (men's wateT), gurgles
lrom the earth near the village of Kladanj.
Hunters discovered it 68 years ago
Its legendary ability to increase men's
sexual capabilities -never scien-
tifically proved -has made the well a
Mecca for local males who have sip·
pt:d the water for decades without hin-drance.
Private innkeepers sold the water to
needy travelers for eight cent& a
quart. A West German businessman is
sald to have set up a profitable en-
terprise in I<Jadanj, selling the "s e x
water" to vacationing fellow coun. trymen.
The alleged elfects of. the water
were heard beyond the mountains
recently and things have changed.
Last week, barbed wire sprang up
around the well a n d armed guards
were posted.
A West German brewery signed a
conditional contract and deposited .a
$50,000 guarantee while testing the
water for commercial sales.
KJadanj authorities said a firm in
Costa Rica had ordered 1,000 gallons
ancl requested distribution rights for
Central America.
Authorite.:; in Sarajevo, capital of
Bosnia-Henegovina province, have set
aside $80,000 to help exploit the water.
·rhey said bottling would start in mid-
.\fay.
Yugosla 1 newspapers said analysis
or the water showed strong con·
centrations of c a 1 c i u m and
h)'diocarbonate with smaller amoWlts
or magnesium, sulphate and traces of
strontium. Magnesium mines are tn
the araa.
Old Shows Dominate
Emmy Nominations Listed
H 0 LL Y W 0 0 D (UPI) -The Lucy Show." (Farnlly Affair); Diet Y ork
established st.an and shows Outst.andl.nc dramatic aeries: "The (Bewitched).
dominated the Emmy nomlnaUona ao· Avengers," "I ~·" "Mr. s lo n: Outstandiog actress la a corned) Imposalb1e," "NE P'·yhou••," "Run I I .......... Ball (T .. _ s .. ~ .. , nounced today _...... _...... f-"·u-... -seres: ~e ~Y 1ivw • .. ,w, • ....,, •uu ... for Your Life," "Star Trek." Barb F ldoo (Ge• S t I
n"mes ae Lucille u"it lbymond Burr, ara e ~ m a r ; • ..., ~ Nomlneted ror out&tanding mwlcal EU-iabeth Montgomery (BewMdted l; Elizabeth Montgomery acd D 0 11 or variety serles: "Bell Tel~ Paula Prentiss (He and SM); Marlo
Adams in tile running. Hour," "The Carol Burnett Show," Thomas (That Girl),
The N&Uonal TeJevilioo Academy of "'lbe Dean Martin Show,'1 "!lowao Marry of Che shows and performer~
Art.s and Sciences lilted aGDOtlt SO and Martin's Laugh-In" ~ "The nominated have anady been can·
cat.eg«ies of eateftajnment lerles, Smothers Brothen." celled from the air, "He ..S She," "I
Victim Rites
Off lndef initely
The lonely. official funeral of Jane
Doe, found with her throat slit in a
soggy Huntington Beach field one
month ago, has been delayed in-
definitely.
Hundreds of leads and clues checked
out by detectives since a group of
small boys made their nightmarish
find Marctl 14 have left investigators
a~ a complete blank wall.
"Two men are working full time on
the case and we have circulars flying
all over the country," says Detective
Joe Grundy.
Fingerprint checks, denUil plate
records, and tracing of an aquamarine
dinner ring worn by the victim have
yielded, nqthlng to turn the aimless
manhunt toward capture of. a suspect.
Coroner's deputies are delaying
rites for the unknown murder victim
in the hope a quick·breaking lead
might turn up someone who can iden-
tify the body.
Soon, however, the county will do
the last thing it can for Jane Doe :
commit her remains to the silent
earth, under a grave marker reserved
for those whose names die with them.
news, documentaries, musicals• Individual nominees fur best Spy" and "Run for Your Life." ~r,,.d.ab and o4f.ler clua16catioos of ift·---=;.;.;;......,~;;-.....,.__.....,__.......,.....,. ....... ___,.___ 'r .. m •• ~: '.:."':::, ti:; &:;.r...;i ~~-.,;..:;..;.;,;.;;-"--'-.....
_ __,.. #fYJdQ,Jl .adif'f§IMIL
'"1e ..... ,,,.......... Mil •
bro9doMt Ma1 19.
CBS led the field w1Ul a totM ot 13
nomloatklO.i. followed by NBC wWi M
aod ABC Oil as.
mittff1 are organfled t.o vote for Ute
Mrl., and llbowa they tblnk m<>St
deserviu1.
State Sen. Anthony C. BeiJen-
son (D·Beverly Hills) says he
wiJJ introduce legislation to
legalize abortions in cases
where there is substantial risk
the child wiU be born deform-
ed.
North Vietnam
Picking Leaders
For P eace Talk?
From Wire Services
SAIGON -North Vietnam an-
nounced two high-level appointments
today, arousing speculation in Saigon
that they would be Hanoi's represen-
tatives at peace talks with the United
States.
The 1:.11nouncement came shortly
after Hanoi again accused President
Johnson o! stalling on a site for
prelimlnary peace talks.
ltanoi broadcast the announcement
tha! Xuan Thuy had been appointed a
government minister and that Tran
Quang Huy had been named chairman
of the cultural and educational board
of. the premier's office.
Analysts of North Vietnt•mese al·
fairs in Saigon, assessing the titles
given the two men antl their
background, speculated that Thuy
mlght head Haooi's negotiating team
and Huy might be its chief spokesman.
Thuy, SS, also known as Nguyen
Xuan Thuy. was foreign minister of
North Vietnam from 1963 to 1965 and
more recently has been a member or
the Commumst Party central com·
mittee secretariat and head ol the cen·
tral committee's foreign relations
department.
Of most ilM'elt to .. ,qtltly video
viewer are the • n te r t ai n m e n t
caie,Ofies:
The winner• al•aya wtn be v<Md by
these ~ 1dlidl art nol
restricted to rewardlnc a ainf)e win·
ner In any oate1ory. Red Rencle%votu in Space
to his past
After Cherpes disclosed what bis
boarder said of his work and
background, Associated Press in-
quiries turned up blanks.
Is there a real Eric Starvo Galt?
The FBI was asked , but declined COO'\•
ment. Neither would the FBI say wby
Galt was wanted, though the Florida
alert had sought only to spot the man,
not arrest bim. No warrant had betn
issued then.
IRS Looking
At Liberace's
Candelabra
WASHINGTON CAP) The
Internal Revenue Service and pianist
Liberace clubed today over whether
the use ol ttiose jeweled jackets.
candelabra and a luxurious home ln
Los Angeles are taxab~
Liberace -who signs b1s name as
Walter V. Liberace -said in papers
filed in U.S. Tax Court that it's all part
of his public image.
He said he pays $300 a month rent
for the part ol the house in which he
lives and that the cost ol running tile
residence -about $50,000 a year -is
deductible as a business_expeme. ~ ~ 'fnk::ti"al i?evinue .gl!~ n:-e
disagreed, saying he was using what
amoonts to corporate property and the
benefits are taxable as dividends from
the corpor.ation, of which he is prin·
cipal owner. The government is seek·
ing $60,654.45 in additional income tax.
es for 1962 through 1964.
Liberace owns 78 pereent of Interna·
tional Artists Ltd., whlch runs his
business for him. The COJ1'>0C'ation
owns the large home 1n Los Angeles.
Liberace's lawyers said "in addition
to the native ability and talent of
Liberace. a portion of the financial
success of International Artists Ltd.,
is attributable to the image that he
has created or that has been created
for him.
"Factors contributing to such imiage
are his wardrobe, c and e 1 ab r a ,
jewelry, pianos, Which in effect are his
trademark, and the place where he
and International Artists Ltd., conduct
btlstness in Los Angeles."
Uberace said that maintaining the
hou.se and all of its accessories for a
thre-year peri-Od cost 1153,841.37. The
Internal Revenue Service would allow
only fl9,000 for such expenses.
Edna Ferber
Succumbs at 80
NEW YORK (AP) ·-Novelist Edna
Ferber. whose "So Big" won the
Pulitzer Prize in 1924. died Tuesday in
New York. She was 80.
"So Big," the story of a woman on a
truck farm outside Chicago, sold more
than 300,000 copies upon publication
and became required reading in many
American schools and unJverslties.
However, it was only one of many
novels. short stories and plays that
she produced and that gained her
world fame. In 1926, she published
..Show Boat." a classic of show
business life on the Mississippi River.
Miss Ferber died at her home at 730
Park Avenue.
Smart" "Hopm'1 H«0a" and "'Mle
''Bewitcbed." "Family Aff aJr." ••o.t
Smart" "Hoe1121 Heroea" .ad '"11\e
In one calelOl'Y, o u t 1 t a n d I n ~
achievement 1fitbJn recwarlY schedul·
ed news proer.ma, there .e 20
nomlneu and therefore 20 pouible
Winnen of the Emm7 award.
Two unmaMed Soviet spaceships accompUshod
history's second fully automatic linkup In orbit
Monday. accordina to the Soviet news qency Tass.
The agency said this linkup was accomplished by
Cosmos satellites, 212, launched Sunday, and 213
t e ( I .
launched Monday. (See story, Page 4), ;
,, 1 . .
I --
-~
'
(C.-W ........... -
Buar County (THU) 5'eriff' s
1>epartmmt ID'ftStifator A I ., I n ,,.,._. announced tbe breUbu?
up of a car theft ~r Ile said b11it
ao&en • can m tbe fint bl' yean. ••wut really got me to
working on the case wu wbm they
stole my car tjibt in fr~nt of the
courthouse,'' JoJinson sald. • •
JanetU Amu MclAod, 17, a bliu-~d.
hm&eJI bloncU [Tom A~ f'rigm
today 1U Mui Ten lntmaational. The
daU{1hter of a Sf,'dnq baUTv 01D11tr,
Mus Mcwod bvm mto ttllf'1 when
she 100$ cmno1'nced the ch<riu of the
Miu Ten l11ternation4l P*ant. She
won a $3,000 acJaolanhip to tM ~ol·
lege of her choice, a 1903 mitomobile,
a tour of E11rope, and a c01npUte
ium?Mr toardto~. •• The Cl.ags at the Oregon C&Ditol
in Salem Will fly at half staff one
day each month to bonot Oregon
servicemen killed in Vietnam, ac·
cording to. Secretary ol State Cl~y
Meyers. "Lowerlnl our flap in
front of the Capffot . one day a
month is a small thing to do, ltbt
it may serve to remind Oregonians
of the great sacrifices our boys are
making in Southeast Alia,'' Meyers
said. •
Pupils in the fifth grade at Hu-
ber Ridge School m Watertnlle,
Ohlo, were Mlud to deacribe
hippiea. Their deJcriptions in.
duded: "HippU• vuallv have
dr~d out of 1 c h o o l and
thev're not ~rv amart. They
thmk thtY are but they really
llf'tft't or thev wouldn't be daing
IUch lillll thinga." "A boy ~ll1"s
beads and long hair and look$
like a girl while the girl wears
long hair and tDClJu bartfooted
and look$ horrible. They Mt
onl11 look Mrrible, but thev do
horrible thing1 lilu kiuing and
huggfng in the 1trect." Out of
the mouth$ of babes • • .!
Steven Vllleneuva, of Arllngt_on.
Tex., can't pronounce the word but he got a subpoena from Arlington
Corporation Court. Officials ex-
plained that Steven's name waa on
the subpoena Ust since be was one
of the passenjlers in a car involved
in an auto accident. But they decid·
ed Steven, son of Mr. and Mn.
Tony VIiianeuva, would not have
to testify. He ii only 2 yeara old. • Mrs. Burian AJclns of Sl Louis
has been writing letten and send-
ing gilt pacbgea to a lonely Ma-
rine in Vietnam. 'Pbe Marine, Cpl.
Jon MacPamplln, .!1..t.. al Arkansas.
responded 1ritb a """' cbect and a
letter urging Mn. Atlnl and ber
daughter to "have a nllht on the town .. on him. Mn. Alina' son,
Rocky, served 1ritb MacPamplln
at Camp Lejeune. N.C. • Tbe robber put a paper sack on
tbe check stand and t o l d
iupennarket ~er Jehft a.Mr
of Spokane. Wuh., to "ftll it wttb
mouey.0 "Have you got •~J'!ft?". Bater asked. The man $1Qlled out
what Jooked lite a cap iutoJ.
Bater alaped the robber oa th•
.bead and tbe man iled. Baker,
allPtlY ahabn bJ the holdup try, laJi1 w\at be WU reallJ mad lboUt
WU tbt lack the robber Jeft OD tbe counter. Jt wu from Baker's com-
petitor.
Crediliiliiy
• •
Gap Widens
Say Editors
WASBJNGTON (AP) -A com-
llliltee of tbe A.mska ~ "' Nft1P8118' Edl1«1 said today ' the
creclbmty iap yana wtdcr lD the
Job:uon AdminiJtratJon than Jt did 1n
preeedlq rectme1 large11 because
t.bil adm.lns.tratlon follows a poUcy of
~ for lta own aab.''
''Tbe Pueblo Incident, the lurpriae
ad 1aCCe11 " the Tet ollemtve, and
tbe lboctlnC postmortem of tbe 19M
Tamm Gull incldent .n combined to
damage fw1be!' whatever credibility
the adminiatration bad left," said a
,...t by tbe Society'• freedom of In·
farmatioD Md pree1-bar committee.
Oloc:ernlng t.be "c:redlbWty pp."
tbe report said: "All adm!nWrdoos
mlllllpalate tbe Deft to e lfeaW Ol'
Jell ateat, all. have beea Dain to
canceal • • • IDd even lie about lm-
portmt JnformaUoa when It served
tbeir Jntereatl to do IO.
"OoPnc wMh tbll la the tut of
e'ftl')' Wllblngton reporter and the
abOity to cope with it 11 what ..,.ates the men from trom the
boya. But under LBJ the coping la im-
llUIUUltlbty more difficult becata1e of·
ftdal deceit ii practiced both when
thwe ii nucn for tt Ind *n there is
ls not."
1be report lllid the press waa blam·
• ed for buildinc up Black l'ower
Jelden, for faUin( to report the plight
of.zs. for "too horribJe" t.e · war coverage, for showing
'"o D I y our 1 I d e beinl beutly ln
· wutime," for over-nporting bippJes
and tbe UM " dn&p, and for being the .. ....,. • ..,, cl the .iabllahment."
"Tbe edlucated c:itlzen blamed the
presa because it only reflects ac-
curately bow contuJed and troubled
the world ls inatead of producing
paDICeU," said Uie report.
The committee bad this other
oblervation:
-Press relations in Vietnam lm-
proved in 1987, but the detailed
reporting d i a p le as e d the ad-
miciltration ''because it pre~nted a
negative but fairly true picture of war
which was complex, confused and, in
the main, going badly for our side."
Senate to Get
$350 Billion
Aids Program
WASHINGTON (AP) -Le&lalaUon
Will be introduced in the Senate this
week aimed at a start on enactment of White House riot commiadoo'a ~cor.n
mendatlona that would cost an
estimated '3SO blllion over a decade.
Sen. Edward W. Brooke, (R-MMe:).
a commission member, plans to in·
troduce bWa Wednesday to make a
limited, low-coat atart on tbe recom·
mendationa, including a conlfesslon.al
study of a ple.n for a guara.nteed an-
nual income.
He a1ao will propoM federal in·
centivea to eliminate racial imbalance
in ecboola a.nd tbe denial ol federal &id
to school dlltricta that decl.lne to
abol.iab such imbalance.
Brooke did not estimate the coil of
his J>l"OPOlll)a but aides said it would
run to thOUAD<!a, ntber thu mllllons
of dollars. They said be avo1dtd in·
trodQclng mare costly measures
because of consrel8iooa1 retlttance to
new spending J>T'Oll'l!DS.
Instead. Brooke hopes for several
small vfotoriea to put Ccrtgre11 on
record in favor of eventual muelve
urban reconstruction, the aides said.
Boot or 'Tax'
Choice Faces
Old Shoe Shiner
..
White crosses were erected on the Grinnell College
Campus at Grinnell, Iowa, Monday to protest a
scheduled vi.sit by U. S. Marine Corps recruiter
Capl Bruce McKenna of Du Moines. Some 2,~
croasea were put up by the students in protest to
the war in Vietnam and, as one student said, "to
honor the memory o1 the thouaa.nda that have al·
ready died there."
War De~lared on-Arsonists
Mayor Daky Gives Chicago Police 'Shoot to Kill' Order
CHICAGO (UPI) -The mayor W&s
angry. His menace wae terse.
Police who saw araoneists were to
"shoot to kill" Officers who saw
loc.ters were to "shoot to maim or
cripple."·
While experb acroes the nation
debated ways of ~ masa rid.al
disturbances, the orders moved from
Mayor Richard J . Daley to Police
Supt. James B. CooliSk Jr. to the r.op
O[t the beat wlhtin a matter of boo.rs
Monday.
Any disturbance in Chicqo tllal in·
volved looting and .finlbomblngs or
Qlher &>rms ol j.~n •ould be met
with "deadly rorce," accordblg to
Daley, "in tbe inter~ of bavlng a fine
city."
$10 MILLION DAMAGE
His .fOund Irish face stem and
angry, Daley said be bad dlscover~d
th~ during tbe recent rioting m
Qllcago .... 11 died and $10 million in
flte damage. w.a. dooe -"every police
officer out.on~ beat'was supposed to
use bis own.decjsjon". about shooting
&r90n1St4 &Del lOo'terl ..
Daley called, the news conferer,ce
Mondey to 8lJll<)W)Ce fonnlltlon of a
nine-man blue-ribbon panel to study
and mielyu the. riolll Md then launch-
ed into an atta~t on \Us own police
department.
He told newsmet'l ttiat be blXI Msum·
ed that the sboot·to-tfll anon.ms an::t
the sboot·to-malm-aDd-erlpple looters
order •as a standlDg dlMotive. He
laid be was ''dmppotntied tb1t the
'order was not i.Mued.'
"Something h• got to give,'' Daley
said. "What lcind of IOCilety att we
bui:ldint?
"We'n tot to face up to this ques-
Uoo-oot with brutality IDd not with
any cruel idea.9, but with some kind of
discipline. U we don't, we won't have
any government."
Mayor John V. Linmay of New
York, whose city was largely spared
racial dlsturbances 1n the wake of ttle
death ol Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,
ha: been credi~ wit2l helping keep
the peace. ·
Lindsay bas said be ordered police
to hold their fire on looters and
arsoniata in the belief that a man's life
was more valuable ~an a suit of
clot.lllng. Lindaay bas been cdtiched
by some mercbanta in Harlem, in·
eluding some Negroes, wbo believed
police should have actively i*rfered
wM:h lootfJ"S and arson.bu during the
rugbt of wrest that s~ept g!ietto areas
April 4.
DaJey grew visibly angry when he
told a news conference that he had in·
structed Conlisk -days before the
rioting broke out -to order his police
officers to use "such force as is
necessary, including deadly force"
against arsonists and looters.
CHILDREN SPARED
"J aaid to him very emphatically
and very definitely that an order be
llaued Jmmed.lately over his signature
to lhoot to till any arsoni:at or anyone
with a Molotov cocktail In their band
b> flre a building because they are
potential murderers, and llo a1ao order
police to aboot to malm or cripple
anyone looting any atarea in tbl city."
Dal~y forbade shooting of children,
a~iDg. "you wouldn't want to 1boot mem. but with Maoe (a noo-lethal chemlc&l puatyaer) you could detal:n
)'O'lngstera.''
Altlbougb Daley said "I'll ctrtainly
take ac:Uon to improve the police
department," be did not iJlcllcate he
planned to fire C o n lt a k • a career
policeman who Is considered bJs good
friend. ·
"I don't want to discuss Jt at this
time," he said. "I'll await~ report,"
referring to the repcrt from a blue-rib-
bon committee be appointed which is
expected to take testimony Crom
police, riot v:lctim1 and defendants;
and officials and esperta.
Asked if ConllJlt should be regarded
as an "interim superintendent" pen-
ding the committee':: report," Daley
said, "no, you cannot. He's the police
superintendent."
ONLY 11 ARRF.STED
The mayor, who said he lN.mtd only
Sunday that police were elven tbe
discretion of shooting or not rbooting
during the rioting, said be was
surpriaed only 1S penona were ar-
rested on arson charges:
"Anyone who doesn't think lt was a
conspiracy should go out and take a
look at it and see wblcll buildings have
been spared," be sad.
On the west side, where the fll'es
were the heaviest during the three
days of rioting, Daley said, aome
N~wned establ.IJtunenta escaped
the flames whlle n e i g b b o r i n g
bolinesses owned by wtUtes were
deetroyed.
Shortly after Daley's statement,
Conlllk i.Nued "to commanding of·
flcers" the following order:
"l -Arson, attempted arson.
burl).ary and attempted burglary are
forcible .felooiea .
"2 -Such force as is necessary. in·
cludlng deadly force, shall be used to
prevent the commisiion of these of-
feD1e1 and to pr.vent t h e escape of
perpetrators."
Coalllk had no oommeot but a
spokesman for his office Mid "the
mayor Js tbe bo11."
By Officials
W.A.SHJHGTON (UPI) -The AJr
J'Cll'OI ~it -dieot9•ed What ltd to tbt c:rub of a CODtroySlial
J"UlA ~ 1D 'l'baOud lut
moatb, aecGidlaf to lDfcwmed sources.
Tbe ltlplllClcdc, •wluiw.., p~
formerly callN tbe ~-·~ ooe Of m teat io .. war ... ~ 17 for
"combat ev1b1aticll." It CNlbed on Us
ft1 to ~ a ..... ID NCll'th Viet. um 11.-ci ., Jll twe.eu crew
pc'ICbutid IDd ......... feacued. a.re. .... MM11J tlalt a teat f11'bt l'Huctma& fomd a Jnblem bl tne fli&l>t coatrcpl 11111m -not in the
JIWle'• ruolutloury ''taT&in-follow. Ing rldlr," u ftnt llllplC'ted.
CBA.BGE8 llADB
In tbe re-euctmeat, piWs produced
a llmlla-Jou of CODtrol IDd u a
n.ault cbaqes ...... ta the fli&ht
caatrol medmdlm.
StlD unerplaJned, however, ns the
loss of a second FlllA, reported
'•.verdue" Oil a miuke acwt N~
Vietnam in t h e firat three days of combat.
The Oommwli.lta cAimed they shot
down the plane in Ha Timi Province,
but U.S. aoun:ea uid tt was unlikely
that the aircraft ever reached North VJetnarn.
It is believed to have taken off from
Thailand and flown across Laos to a
poJ.nt near the North Vietnamese
border. There, wi1bout ever e11tertng
North Vietnam airspace, it evide1itly
aborted it! mss&on and beaded back
to Tballaod.
PILOTS NOT FOUND
IC is Delieved to llave crashed
somewhere in the jungle. The pilots
have not been found and officials can
only ~ss what happened.
T h e FlllA's "terrain following
radar" permits it to fly at supersonic
speeds cloee to the ground, following
the contour cl the terrain, thus allow-
ing it to slip in under the field of
enemy radar.
Thoie fltted out for Southult Asia.
boweVS', were capable DI low-level
ndar<OOtrolled fliaht only at subsonic
speeds. ·
The 1<>61 of the secood FlllA caused
the contrownial warplanes to be
grounded temporarily. They returned
to actioo over the weekend with
strikes against targets in North Viel·
nam.
Rocky to Affirm
Candidacy Soon,
Says Sen. Brooke
BOSTON (UPJ) -Sen. Edward W.
Brooke (R-Masa.), said today Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York is
"very much interested" 1n seeking ~e
Republican presidential nomin•~on
and will soon make an "a!firmative
statement" on hll candidacy.
"Governor Rockefeller is not a
reluctant candidate," Brooke sald.
"He bu always wanted the nomina·
tion and be wantl the nomination
now."
The Maanchusetta senator s.aid
when Rockefeller announced last
month be would not aeet the nomina-
tion "what be was sayblg was that be
was not a candidate iD the primaries.
He is very moch interested in the
nomination."
"In short order, you will bur an al·
ftrmatlve statement from Governor
Rockefeller reprding hla candidacy,"
Brooke predicted.
Brooke, wh,o announced his support
last week for Rockefeller, &aid be
would go throughout the country, to
speak on th.e governor's behalf, it he
were asked.
'-.
CORE Leader's
Son Murdered;
Negro Man Held Eastern Seaboard Shivers
re.a..,...,..
........ l'l'IC-
A.9'11tt .. n • """*-,.. 3S ...... ., Al .......... .. S1
~ "' "' ,. 21 » .. ,.,. 4S (I
~ .. • Clllclr!Mtl Je J1 OtwteN • n ~ " " Dia ..... • 1111
°"""' .. ,. ..... I 4 l'tn WWII S7 .,....... • .. ...... : 2l .413 ......... n ...... • .. c.... Qty " " t:=. • • .. ,, ...... .. .. ......... • 111 -I .. • .... ~ Tl • .... ., .. • 0
Tf
-Tr
--....... = .... ......
.. -... a.A ... """
u.ee. -....... ... .... ,,,., .• ..,, -.u Jl
s
Afr
that
'1la1 1aat eea.
lie, e of
f Cll'
1 lta
lltt-rew
.ted..
1est n bs
the low.
ICtd
I a
laht
the
:1ed
rt.h
i of
shot
lee,
tely
Jrth
·om
.o a
iese
:ing
ntly
ack
bed
lots
can
riJlg
lftic
ring
.OW·
! of
,ala.
!Vel we
tsed
be
ned
'1th
·iet-
D
.e
w.
iov.
k is
the
lion
tive
: a
aid.
ina·
lion
;aid
last
ina·
: he
ies.
the
af.
11or
~."
>Ort
he
, to
be
-n
If
Jt
r ~ Soviet Artned -.,. -·
Egypt _Hails
Arab Forces
United Pre11 le&eraatieuJ
An Egyptian general hail·
ed the su~ss of Arab
rearmament today and call·
ed on United Arab Republic
pilou to double t h e J 1'
traming hours and fugbt
tune.
Gen. Mohamed F'awii. U.
A. R. minister of war. told
E gyp t i an A1r Force
Academy graduates r e ·
equipment of A r a b armed
forces by the Soviet Umoo
since the June Mideast war
had "changed our position
of weapoory."
Fawzi's remarb came as
Dr. Gunnar Jarring, United
Nations Peace E n v o y ,
prepared to carry h is
mission again to oairo. Jar-
ring mffts Wednesday with
Mmmoud .Ria<!. U. A. R.
foreign minioster. in what
Arab sources said could be
a last attempt by ttle
Swedish ctipk>mat to settle
the A r a b · I s r a e I i con-
frontation.
territory octupied bl tbe ab·
day war.
Al Abram, the semi-of·
ficial Cairo newspaper, said
~ Cairo &'OYer'Dmtnl bad
asked Jarring during an
earlier meeting this mottth
that he give the U. A. R.
"decisive ·word" on the Im-
plementation ol the U. N.
resolution. Tile newtpaper
said the u. A. R WM co6-
rulting other Arab nations
over the po.ssibility ol tating
the problem baCk to the
United N atioos.
Israeli g o v e r n m e n t
sources Monday d:.iamiased a
report from Ammtn, the
JordaDian capital, of an im·
pending settlement between
Israel and Jordan. The
report said tbe sel.'Uement
pTovided for tbe
demmtaJUation of an area
ol the west bsnl of the
.Jordan River and its return
to Jordan.
ln his speech lo Egyptian
airmen. Fawzi said rearma·
ment bad placed Egypt
... ... ..... ..-.. ,.. --.. .
Ul'I Tei.lltto
Snowed llnder
OAIL Y PILOT S .
150 Arrested
30 Injured
In Rioting
FRANKFURT, Germany
(AP) -Police battled Jef.
Ust demonstralo~ 1n the
streets around the Axel
Spranger l>Ubltshinl! plants in
1-·rankfUTt and Munich Mon-
day night as thousands or
students tried to prevent
disb'ibubon of t o d a y ' s
newspapers
demonstrators w e r e ar-
M ore than 150
demonstrators w e re ar-
rested as student noting
spread lo West Germany.
Thirty demonstratoTs were
reported seriow;ly injured.
West Berlin was free of
student violence Monday for
the first time i;ince the al·
!be Springer papers on
Germany's dissatis!ted Jef·
tist stude.nti were an m•
direct incitement to the at·
tack on Dutschke
A casualty of Monday's
Cigbt al Ille Springer plant tn
Munich w a s Associated
Press photographer Klaus
f"nngs.
Two Former
Top Greeks
Arrested
templed assassination there ATHENS <UP l) _ Two
last Thursday of R u d i Outschke. 28·~ar old leader rormer G re e k premiers,
of the Socialist Student George Papandreou a II d
Federation, or SDS. P a nayotis Kanellopoulos,
But more than 2,000 West were under house arrest to
Berlin students held a non-day al the order of the oa·
violent demonstration under lion's military junta.
the watchful eyes of police Police guards were posted
with water cannon. Monday at the homes of the
Ou t sch.ke. hospitalized two men and their telephone
with three bullet wounds. lines were cut. Visit.ors were
was reported out of im-barred.
Jarring has ~n at-
tempting to gain compliooce
with a November . N
Security Council p e a c e
resolution. Israel. \'ictor in
the June war. has IJ\Sisted
on direct negotiations with
the Arab states.
"now in quality and quantity Up to her neck in State Income Tax returns is Mrs.
1n a positjon different Crom Karen Smirc ich. office worker at State Income Tax
that after the war." He said headquarters in Denver. More than 90.000 returns
the airmen should double were recejved Mond ay, prior to the mjdnigbt dead· their training hours so they ________ __;,_.:: ______ __;;, ________________________ _
li ne. and officials predict that an estimated 120.000
more will arrive today, a day after deadline. As
long as the envelope is postmarked 'prior lo mtd·
night. April 15, sender is ''under the wire." me1iiate danger A house No explanation was given,
painter accused o( shooting but the two men have been
hrrn, 23-year-old Jo s e [ crillc<>I of the regime's pro·
Rachmann. was wounded by posed constitution.
The U A. R. and the other
Arab states bave held. that
Che first step tow;:.ird a peace
seUlement must be un-
conditional withdrawal of
Israeli armed forces from
can enter "any battle suc-
cessfully."
f?resident· Gamal Abdt>l
Nasser made a new ~~al
for Arab unity. urging the
Arab nations to bury their
ideological diffl"t'ences and
join forces in the struggle to
achieve victory over Israel
U.S. 4 Years Behind
Space Race Schedule
WASHINGTON IAPI -
The Soviet Union's second
lineup of unmanned Cosmos
satellites catches the U.S.
military space p r o j e c t
languishing nearly f o u r
years behind schedule.
The Air Force's manned
orbiting laboratory program
oriainally a.imed !or a first
launch late last year or ear-
ly 1968 but that goal has
slipped because of technical
problems to mid-1971, of.
ficiaJs say.
ln addition to the time la~?.
the cost of MOL. as the pro·
gram ii; known, ha s
e s c a I a t e d from the
originally estjmated $1.5
billion to nearly S2.5 billion .
The Soviets, apparently
getting set to put men into
space again, reported Mon-
day a successful linkup of
two unmanned spaceships.
They ~re separated again
aft.er 3 hours and 5 0
minutes.
Monda y's linkup
duplicated a feat f i r s t
performed by the SoVJet
Union last Oct. 30
This country's MOL pro-
tram ;ums at sending a
team of astronauts orbiting
for a mooth of experiment~
to determine how well man
can operate in space. ·
The 1 o n g-ran1-te view Is
tha t so meda y U.S.
astronaul5 may be able tn
operate military command
posts orbiting the earth.
Florida
Smokers
Roll Own
The manned nights -to
be preceded by two un·
marined shots -will involve
a two-part spacecraft lifted
by a gigantic Titan 3C
booster with two million
pounds of thrust.
The front end will be a
modified Gemini capsule in
which two astronauts will
ride skyward. Connected,
behind will be a 42-foot can·
ister-1 i k e lab where t h e
crew will live. work, eat and
sleep in shirtsleeve t"n·
vironment for 30 days.
flying at altitudes up to 3.'>0
miles.
When their mission 1s
finished the astronauts will
climb through a trap door
back into tbe G e m i n i
capsule ror the ride back to
earth. abandoning the lab to
lonely orbiting.
Mom Thanks
Donors For
Girl's Life
PONTIAC. Mich. IUPll -
The mother of 5-year-0ld
Sally Harrington thanked
blood donors throughout the
world today for keeping her
daughter alive.
·'The response has jwst
been astounding," said Mrs .
I m m a n u e I Harrington.
whose little girl's body n<>
longer replaces blood cells.
"The whole thing j u s t
mushroomed. We certainly
are most grateful for the
help."'
People and organizations
from across the United
Sta~ -and even from
Canada and Puerto Rico -TAMPA. Fla. CAP) -began donating blood last
Florida smokers. gaspt.Dg month after a United Press
over new prices oC up to 50 loternational dispatch told
cents for a pack oi cigarel· of little Sally's dangerously
tes. are oo • roU-your-own dwindling blood aupply.
lock. At the time, the Har-
Thrifty 19mokers h a v e rlngtons were 4-00 to 500
besieged tobacco shops by pints low, and desperately
the thousand4 ln search of needed more blood to .keep
roll-your own gadgets rang-up the almoet continuous
Lng in price from 75 centa to transfusions needed to teep
'6.95. With the machine, and Selly alive. • mue still. • llk:ent pack Blood drives were ,tarted,
of tobacco ald papers pro-and thousands gave.
duce.s 50 cigarettes or more. Army-.nd Air Force units
Many s t o r e o w n e r s gave: prisonen 'in Mk bigan re~ almoet lmmed1aite and New York gave : in fact.
seUoots of the madtines Mrs. Harrington said. so
shortly alUr April 1, when much blood poured in that
the .ate clg.etW tu wa• ttlcy weTe able to share it
boosted from eigtlt to 15 with other children with
cenu a pack. . • blood defect$. ~ it.tfi~~. ~.~-TTTI,...,,....;-:=-~=-~~-=
Solons Brand Flight Costs 'Farce' .
the poUce \WlO captured him Bot'h were originally ar·
and was rrported tn good rested a year ago when the
cooditJon al the s am e junta took control of ttie
ho pltal. 'government but {hey were
WASHINGTON tUPI) -
A group of Congressmen
from CaliJornia and Hawaii.
Rll frequent Jong distance
air travelers. claim thi~ a
new government rule order·
in~ a>rline~ to charge extra
for inflight liquor a n d
movi~ is a farce.
The group. headed by
Rep .. John E. Moss (D·
Calif.). filed a formal com·
plamt with the C i v i I
\eronc..ut1cs Board Monday
;isking that its order be
suspended on grounds that it
wa<1 a)?ainsf the public in·
terest anrl illP.gal.
The April 6 order madr
cha·r~es mandatory f o r
drinks and movies effective
May I , but some '-•irlines are
already chairgmg $1 a dnnk
and S'l for movie~.
Sprini::ar. the b i g g e 11 l freed in a Christmas am·
"'"' •r:O"er and magezine nesty.
publisher I n continental In another development,
. . Jpe. hac; long been a friends of former cabinet
target of leftist i;tudents miruster loannis Zigdi.s said
because en hiii conservative he was arrested and was
editorial policy. being held at police head·
The SDS claims attacks in quarters in Athens.
There's something very
important you should always
leave with babysitter
..
. '
'
be si des the baby. Always
leave a telephone num ber
where you can be reac hed.
Include a list of emergency
numbers too. By the way, a spec ial
space for emergency num-
bers, like Fire, Police an d
Doctor, is pr inted on the
insi de of the front cover of
your directory. Jot those
numbers down tod~y. Then,
next time you're out for the
We're here to· help.
PICitlc TeleplioM@
,
__ ....._,._ ___ . -----.-__ ... ----
I DAILY PtLOT T~, April 16. 1'68
0 t
Baekl•sh Expeeted
Tax Withho"1ing
To Win Support?
SACRAMEN'ro CAP) -A
lftlldent.ial no m I nation,
banked today on a .. tax
t.cklub" to help . w l n
lepslattve support f o r
peyroU wttbholdiDf ol. state
-.,me t.uu - a ayttem
GpllOMd by Gov. Reagan.
AMmlblyman John G.
Veneman of Modesto aid
1here is a "real dnire for
wttbhokllng right now" -
the day after the April lS
deadline for paying the in-
creued .tate i:noome tax
•ithout penalty.
Hundreds of tbouaanda of.
tu returns were malled at
virtually the tast minute
Monday. ~Y taxpayers
found their btllJ double or
triple the previous year's
and bad to dlp into aavinp
Sterling
Hayden Son
Indicted
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
The eon ot. ~ Steriinc
Hayden ii llDODI nine
persons 1ndJcted by a
federal grand jury on ctr.i
evasion cblrge. ltemmiog
from a March S demonltra-
Uon.
C h r II t la n Winllow
Haydew;' 19, MaBbu, bornec1
his "ait notice 1D front ol.
the amed force. tndootb>
cen~r durint the ~
1pon1ore d by 'lbe
Resistmoe, • n entidnltt group.
''I e~to IOtojla,'' be
said at luit time. "1 would
r&1ber 10 to jltl then 10 Co
war and "11 people."
The U.S. Aitomey'1 olllot
sald Monday ~ 8-Jden
Wat one of nine per9IOOI fn..
dkUd laat week tor flliiure
to report for Induction or
refusal to be inducted March s.
If OOftvkted, Hayden could
be sentenced to up to ft9e
years 1D prW.C. mil f!md
$10,000. All ol b det•
danls f a c e ll'Nlgnment
within the not '"" weeb, the attorney '1 otf1ct aid.
or bom'1'r to come up with
the tax payment.
The Assembly Revenue
and Taxadon Committee,
wbicb Veneman beada, 11
scheduled to bold a hearJnc
m hia wittlholdlng b l l I
Wedne9c»y afternoon.
Veneman and other key
lqWatiora 1 u g g ea te d
wiebbokbg tio Reagan dur·
ing a meeting two weeb
a,o as the logical way oot of
a deepening .tate financial
dilemma. 'Jbere was no in·
clication t b • Repubiice.o
IOftmOI' WU relaxinl his
steadfut oppo1itton ,
V eoeman said.
V e nema.o' I wiChholdlng
plan woukl be similar to the
federal one, witti employers
deducting part of the tax
from dlecb each p a y
period.
Veneman told a reporter
Monda7 tome penooa have
tM lmpresaioo withholding
• ''another tax .••
"If we can put llC!'OSI the
idea that nd>ody pays any
more, then I thJn1t that at-
titut1e will cbange," be aOf.
Reagan's <emetive has
been to euggelt a type ol
"<ll:ristmu clUb" savings
plan, coupJed tritb voluntary
payroll dedlrctions, to avoid
the burden ol paying the lull
tu at one time.
He.Jllso has np-ropueed ..... -that
tb• It.ate income tax return
be a "cerbon copy" of 12le
federal return. 'lbe tax-
P31• f!M!O merely wouJd fiture biJ ltate tu as a
percu tage ol. the fe<kr al
pe~
Trial Near End
LOS ANGEU.S (UPI) -
The lecond murder 1rial of
Anthony David Dontaoville,
aCCUled killer of two little
Alt.8lle!a lfrll, WU ex·
pected to reedl the jury tD-dl(y. .
Dep. Diat. Atty. J . Miller
Leavy, who began tn. rebu~
tel ltMHi**' Monday, WM
to eondude tt today t leavl.ng
Super'iar Ooart JQdge Mark
Brandler free to instruct the
Jury of "'"'9D men and five
women.
---
Reagan Urges Solid
Front for Convention
SACRAMEN'l'o (AP) -
Gov. Reagan is asking
Calilunl.a delegates to tbe
Rep u b Ji c an National
Convention to .tick with him
and not announce their 1up-
port for any presidential
possibility u n I e s s he
releases them.
Tiie Republican govemor
went behind closied doors
with the 86-vote delegation
in Los Angeles Tuesday and,
according lo ~ ol. the
delegates, made '.l plea for a
sotid Catt!ornia front at the
convention.
The governor said "be
hoped nobody will take a
position" too eariy in Ile
g a m e, sald t b e delegate,
who declined tbe \lie of his
name.
The meeting waa ttle first
for tM delegates and lt end-
ed w.i.ttl Reagan still sticking
ftnnly to bis public position
tbat he ii not a candidate
for the nomina&.ioft -juat a
favorite 1100 who wants to
bold the state party together
and exert as much influence
as pouible at the COii·
~~.
But F. OMon White, a
key Barry G o I d w a te r
atrde&ist in 1964, gave a
report that cheered
delegates who hope the COD·
vention will deadlock and
eventually give the nomln~
tion to Reagan.
"He u one ot lour or five
leading Republicam who
will be t'OOSidered by the
convention," said White,
who was hired by delegate
Henry SalvW>ri, a Loe
Angeles._ industrialilt W'bo ii
considered one ol. t b e
prHidential hawks io the
.(leagan camp.
"Well, that's his opini-On,"
Reagan said }at~r. "I don't
know what h;e's basing it on."
Californians
Stick to Nixon I
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
F o r· m e r Vioe President
Richard M. Nixon is still
favored by C a I i f o r n I a
R e p u b l i c a n s for the
Republican auemblyman
1ay1 the state Poll.
They al.so believe be could
win the general election in
November, said the poll. tbe, findins.s of whidl were
released Tuetdly.
... -
Y9'-ty Aslis
Re.cord
LA Budget]
LOS ANCELES (UPll -
Mayor S a m YOrt1 toct.y
submitted a record mt'!:t
wtng budget of. fGO
to tht dty COW>CtJ for the1 · i-.. Oaical year be~,
1D J11ne.
Fifteen percent bllber
than the present budt«, the
new ooe baa a deGcit ol. -.,o.e mllllon. Yorty asked
the city coundl tlo ni1e
revenues by m-.m otber
than property tuatioo to
cover the abortare.
"While l am oot mutna a
specific proposal at au
time to reduce the (pr-Operty
tax l below its current rate
of 88.Sl cerrta for ieneral cl·
ty governmen~. It h a 1
always been my poaltion
that the city must diversify
l~ revenue base and relieve
the burden on the home
owner," Yorty Nici.
Harbor Case
Tape Nixed
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
A judge bas thrown out of
court a tape recordiog
which lec;t to the indictment
of land developer Keith
Sm.itb on ti ve cowru of per-
1 jury in the Harbor Com·
missio?i scandal. I
The tape was a recording I
ol. a bu.alnesa converaatioo
Nov. 10, 1~, in Ule offices '
o( Smith's San SebMtian
Development Co., ®ring
Whfoh Srnttb allegedly a.a.id
he controlled four out ol five
votes on the Harbor Com·I ~ion.
New Sta dium
SAN FRANCJSCO (AP) -
A mayor's advisory com-
mittee bas recommended
construction of a domed
5 5 ,000.seat multi-purpose
stadium, south of ~arket
Street.
I
The commfftee recom-
mended immediate at.art of
construction md '11 o
~molitioo ol Cand)estick
Pal'k, the bome of the San
Francllco iGants.
M~oas .==~·"'-------~~
· ~llILn-OOJ>' ;.::"' California Leuislature in Action 'HFUH ........ "-
lfT'S IE fllBIDl Y
U you bave new netpbcn
or know of anyone lDO'rinl
to our area, please tell ua
10 that we may at.end a
friendly welcome and help
them to become acquainted
In their new 11UTOandJD1a.
Huntilllfon Buell
Visitor
SU..9626
Cost1 Mesa Visitor
642-2472
So. COISI Visitor
NIGHT • DAY SERVICE t:• A.IA. TO t:• PM-SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e AIMllt tbe lolt1 • ,Adte
....... ttblral rnN'd
••• a '*9,.,...... and .......... ~
e ~ are two womt!lll who
... ..,. lwnd ~
...... ... .... Oftlmt
...... TkADEW.'I ••A191'
e !fwwboeta ... t.ee
....... P'Mff • ,....a-·mru
-----·~·
-
sale! Roma Austrian swag panels
with bllttoned top to acliust lencjth
11. 99 50" wide, 81 " long, regularly 15.99 ea.
reg. 8.99 50" wide, 36" long, ea. 6.99
reg. 9.99 50'' wide, 45" long, ea. 7.99
reg. I I .99 5.0" wide, 54" long, ea. 8.99
These unique curtain panels are made of soft rayon boucle
yarns and closely woven bands of cotton. Buttons an d clasps
allow for a +.inc h adjustment in leng th. Gold, white. olive.
adjust buttons at top to raise or lower 4"
sale!
Eden Roe white Cllltique satin
insuk'.ted draperies In 57 slaes
6.99 48" lt M' ~ir, regul.rfy 10.00
With 57 sizes to pid from , it's a safe bet you'll be ~ble to
drape almost any type of window ... just try us! Eden Roe
draperies are white rayon/ acetate antique satin insulated
to keep out heat ond cold. They' re sun and fade proof. per·
fectly washable, and need little or no ironing.
lll"•IW'
... ,. ........... '-'"•! ii'·o...v • .._
'
Dr•pery Dry Cl.ani'"): Just call your nearest may co. ext.
893-lS. for ot-home erlimate, pidup and delivery. No obli·
gotion, no chofge . •
...... _ -._.._._._......... ---::..-.... ------------
. . . -. -..
ll TlludlY, .,,.J 1', lW
Lion NOTICE ,
For the Record ,.,,...
CPITIJllCATI °" auSHlbt. PICTITlOUI llAM8 ,._,.... NOTICa Of' SAU Of' HAL
TM ......,....,... ... ~ ... " -CHfi.tCAT• OJI •u•••u• HOl'HTY AT ••rvAnt IAU ~ ........ It ..... Mlle ..,... 11.cflftOUI... ... ......
LUNA
Collcll>CIOll Lune-. 6U E. CYllroH SI.,
Antlltlm. Died Nrll I~. Survived bv
tllrM dMll!lttrs. M", Ntfllo Orozco,
Mrs. JllOllHa ltVIL 111111 Mtl. Marv
,..,_, tw. -Joo 11111 Gllllltf W-1 IS a'9f'ddllldrtll Md 15 _..
oranddllldAll. tlOMrv, ~ ••
l".M~ Polk F1ntl1Y Colol*I Funtnl
Home1 1t•ftm Moos. Tllllndlv. f
A..M.. our LldY ef tllt """r Ct1lwlllc CIM'dl, ""'9 Alla. Directed 111 ,.....
l"em11¥ COIGnlal Funeral lfema. RECKERT
LIM/lat It. ttllCQrt, Ate .. , d 611
Metnolla, c;~. ,....,, 8W.Y AllJl'fl
t.i. _.,,,,.. bv aen, Wllllllft I . lladt·
Ht, c:or-1 dlwllter. Mr•. Jertcl Alllll, HVl!tllwlon leadll '"'4fler, A.
W. Hutfalllllttor, Mn. W, V. lol•1
aflcl lftM tl'Mlddllld...i. lervlee, Tilvttdly, 11 A.H.,. S...11111 OllMI.
lni.m-t, Westmlna,.r Memorlll '•1'11· Smltlls MOf'tuerv. DI~
MARTIN JM!lle Olnrvdt Marltll. ,... ,,, of
'" IL lltll St., Cetta Mat. Servlc.s Nl'ldltla. Wtskllff Mor1Vtrv, ........
Olroclot1.
BELL
Melbl aall. ti» Via XafltlMI, N~
ltodl. S<lrvtved llv -· ,.,..,, G. a.u. Jr.1 tllter, Silvio lredlme111 IWellltr,
Jamea A. W..tal!ION. ~ Tlwr> div, 11 &AL. ,.aelflQ VllW Olt11tl.
ltllJ Mertv1rv, 3SJD I. Goist H,. wov. Coran. del Mar, 01_..,....
BALTZ MORTUARIES
CorOlla del Mar OR UCM
Com Meta Ml Wal
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
lit Broad'nlj~ Meta LI .
PACIFIC VIEW
c:::.~~
-hdfte-vin Drift Ne'lflllft BeMla, Callfenla
"""" PUS FAMILY
OOLONIAL rt1NP!ltAL BOMB
"'1 .... Afe.
W ...... IWF -..SSS
ntrrlFI MOB111AllY
Ol'ft:Un llOltTUARY
.,,, £. "" ... c.-Mela ··--
or1 ... _._ l"iiiit, QllftnU.. 11M1r 11W TN ~--... CllttttY M la -1Ufl8atol CWH °" 'IMa tlctlt-fl"" -et PACll'IC ILl!Co Mth111 • MIMel It IU'!.t •1 JI. A. A, H&T9 ... t&L.IJICMUil& ll'Olt TltQNICS ~AMY IM 1Mt 1114 ti,,,. CoftfNfle h!-t• Ot1nee ~ AltNf't, TMC C.OUllTY OP 1.0I ANell.U ft ~ ot Ille ftl......._ ""91\, ft Me ..,.., C. ~~ """'r ~ ft~ttllll/I 111 11tt Mttttr tf tM l.lMte el JOHN ~ flllllO lft Ml eM ''"' fl ~ "" ~ tf 1¥A,..,.""4 A..,. 9lld IN.t llEXl"OllO MOOOf, ~.
C lida ... la M' """'"' Nie firm It ___, ef Ille fOllNlfte Nefie. It floNllY t i-fllet l"4 u,..
t ... ..._ .. ·-"' um MIN Vista ~ --llOIM Ill fllll ...... Of .......... \lf'lll ,.., .. ..,...... ..... tft • Onso .. on Drtw. ~ Pol11t. CaUtotllla. re..:: ~ u =· N-9 • .,., ..,. ""' ... , of Alll'll, IHI: •t .... 11 Dtlod April 11. '"':.. C.IHWIH ... di, • f ti< e Of LINOITltOM. aottlON, J-II .• ,_ l.OVEl.L .. l(ING. "' S. l"loww a1r .. t, ..... If Ctllfol'ft .. , °'11Mt ~: Dtlod ""11 4 l1Nt. "'-•-~ i 11 I I t '°'' Los Al!Nlt\; t0017,
0.. A(H'll U, I ... , M!oi't -. 1 ..... "! ~ J. _. C:-1¥ fll L• .-.-i.. ltttt ef ~IC 1fl W.-tw, Mid S'9it. -ll'MllY ... ,. ol Ctflfornlf, °''"" c;oi,nty; Cllffottlla to tllt llfoMll t lld '*' ~.
SANTA ANA -Savinp ol under 1tle BulldiJ)g Services •*411'1d J•"* it. ''"" 1t-10,,. ~ "'::1'.!. '::· ~:,:· • MM•1'i: •!Id w117tet lo CIO!!flnNt1011 ..,. t1ld
D to M tllt lltl'Mll WllOM MIM It _. """'rwl llohtt J ~Ill ~":" S<IMflor COi/it, 111 lllt rttl\t, tlllt tfld 111-
mqrt tblin '1101000 a )'ter epar1meot. ~ 10 11\t w1111111 lnt1~J efl4 " • tllt _..,, wile.. Mf'llt 1, llM<r': "":! Of Mlf 41tc.,llll 11 ftle lfnle ol
t b r 0 U 'h ............. u~-""on o'r T,.. s aid •' 11 ·~ ,.. ,_,._ lllt .. -. _. • "" wi1t1111 ,,.lnlllltM ""' •• •!Id '" "" '""'· '"" •lld •11.;....1 ,.._, __ "' 11 0 m 4 S (0,FleW. SlfAl.l l ckNW ...... lie exec.uted if1e -llllt tM •lat. OI 111<1 dtcHMd to.a -"-,,__._ b i J d l d-.....__,.e . Omllll V, u.. (Ol"l"ICIAL 5'Al.l , -.iltecl bl' DP'rtlklft OI ltw °" ~. v~~ ---v u D • "l"N ....._ . eoocerned m lilolll'Y l'wllc • Ctllfemll JOMPll I! Q,1111• otMr -Of' 111 llCldlllOll to !Mt °' Mid
__ ._._ .&.~ _,,,. ... _ ha· _... ,.,l11c:lpal OlflQ In Holl p;,.,jlc C lltor I dM>llHd, •I tlll tlf'llt Of dttlll. Ill 11111 to
UNl.IUl'llQlmC9 £'UUUUWa WW 1&m ~ V9 IPPf'O\'<N t21e C>-• C!Mlfltv ,rlN:~I -I: 11 a 111 tM c.rt1ln l'tll Pr"'4rtv UIUlle In be --l-·ed 11rou.J. .. 111tt1. recommend.a1ioos ,,,.., eomm1111on Eolm ore"" c-tr 111111tt l tldl, C.U111¥ of Oftnot. "'" "' ~ P • r • · Mttdl tJ, 1tn Mv '°"'mtNltll fJCP1t1t C•llforlll•. P1ttlculM'ty o..cr11Mid •• gram edof:ted todty by tt\e ,.u1111we1 Ore• coast Detty 1"11ot. JVM 11, ""' to1iow.. llMrlt:
boa-d of superviaor1. AIH'tt i•.L~E,.GA.,.L MINOTIY ?, 'CE"' .,..... .=r.=~':, :.'~~" o.11v "''°.:S,,.. '~!ew"'J,,~':., kQ, fn .i-1...:~ Of $100 000 ' tM COUii,.. Of O!'tnee. Slit. of County A~1n1wve • Celffwnl1. tMtc:rlbtd" tolllwl1
Brown Act .111~. n-s...rt E. .......-.-. ' tVPnlCllt toulT 6' TRI LEGAL NOTICE L.ot 1, •Ioctl '""' Tract 11 ~ ~ ..._,.. AUVU•-ITAT·•• C&Lfll'OaNIA ~ In look ,, ,. ... 22 ., .w-1-outllned a project under ,,.. COVllTY 01' ORANH R nls.
W • df all COii itv"' ... o.1tut su,.eaioa eouaT o,. TM• T~ 111 Mlf cult in llwM ~ of study f« the put four ID suMMONs STATtr Oii CAl.t,.OltNtA 'Oa "" united stilft on ~nMtloft ., ....
Changes months. 'lbrou .... it -.ooo ~ MA•ILYN •. WIHOHT. l'llfnl1tl V1. TNI ,COUNTY o,. OUNO• °' Nrt Cl•h •n4 blltnc• wldelleed ~
6"• _, JOHN 9. WltlGHT, TUNS WORLD Ne. A.nnl not• •ecvred tw MOf'lllt .. .,. Trwl Ot9'f 1 • will be saved elllNl!iy Al•PNl!S. INC .•• COl'POl'•tlon. OO&J I, NOTIU 01' NIAlltNO q.. PITITIOM Oii Ille ..-rtv IO llOld Ten -°"' Of "'-.·""" ..,.,.sonnet redoc· T Co . 11. 111, 1v, v. VI 111d vii,~.... POil Pao~T.I QI' w1u. AND i mounl bid 10 111 ._·1..,, wttll Md
SANTA ANA -SUppo~ l!laV\461" r-0 unty _.flEOl'Lli OF THIE STATE OF COOICIL. &MD 1"011 I. ITT I a S Ilda 04' ofl9t9 to bt In wrltf!lf I nd 'wlll ,,, tioos; '10,QOO In overtlmie CALIFOltNIA .. llM •lloYt "'"*' Defen. THTAMINT&llY "'rectlVecl ., tM aforKlld Ofrlca It""'
for a bill n--"--t-•"'e • .._.._..,...., fte-'~"+u. of ,: cle!ltt: l!atete et Clllrlea IE. l"tedtrlekl, 11st HIM •lfff Ille tint PllbflQfklll htrtof and , v.. ~1vl~ u1 unvv~ Muutv • You~ wetw ell~ to flle 1 writ· "-• C. £. l"rederlcb. •llo k-" before CS.I• o1 .,,.
Californ.la Senate w b I c b larttr staff; $.'5,700 b'outb SANTA ANA -The~:_. -=~fl =-p:in= :": Chl.J/r.c~":i F~~m· ~~':''n.11 Dtlwdi~:t"M~
-··'.. "---...L... ...._ anti· transfer of Orange County Ora11ge Counlly treasury got cleflt 111 llM •bow en1111ec1 court In ti. !':_lldrtcl Qell~,!! F,......~ ""11 ttled Adm1n1itra1or 9.. 111e •t•te WVUN &nvel>ftlu UKt Medical Center -..... "'-.. •bow 111Htltcl actloft btoUallt _,,,.t Y<1<1 ... rein • Hnt,.... tor,,_,. et wl Ind of Mid dK.....,t •ecr-y provis!OltS of tile . ~ a $100,000 windf>all Monday In Mid COllrt. WltllJn TEN den lfter ,... TCodtlCll •,flcl !!',. 111"1~ .!!.. ~ LINOSJROM, ltOllSON,
0 ""' iDg fUnction W & Central Ml"flct 4111 YIM/ Of "111 aum!TION. If -ved H -l rt "' e ""'"'' •---· ~ l.OVal.L & ICIN• B....-m Act baa been voted w.beii ~e County Elrnployes wtt11111 1111 above "'"*' covntr. or w1t111n Wlllcll IJ mt4t tor tur11Mr P•rllevllrs. •nd UJ 1. 11.._ '''""·suite •
• V'f'U agency, and $4,000 Chr~ • , THlllTY din If atrwd e!MWMre. tt11t "" ",,,. 11111 """ "' llM•I"' 1111 .... A-tea. Calftnll• ,..11 by the Orange c 0 u n t y M . 0 c h es t e r r...-;.i .. J; Retirement System voted t4 You .,. hfftllv noHll..t 11111 unltR YoU Mme II•• ......... fOr Altrll .2'. '"'· It .. .....,., .... Mlftllllttratw VVll'l.'I"' Split •191 000 '-} II "le I wrl~ r-alW Plttdllll Mid 9:30 a.m., In llM cour1r00m ol o.art-4n..OC Leagu of Citi Sfl'l'Vice oeater. • ' J:U surp us Plll11llff Wiii Ilk• lud9IM!lf fOr a11y ,;_..., _... No. 1 "' Mid -.n, •1 IOl Nortll 'ubllslltd Or c t e . ea. Maintenance -1 ......,.,.., eanlings. °' da-.. demlndecl In ..,. ccmplelnt .. ~'=!' 111 tM cttv °' Sent• Ana. AP<il "· "· n.'~ oes o111Y =·
The bill, AB 20'l, which • vi-R t l "''1"' -contred, ... Wiii '""' to ""' 0.ttd A. I'll s 1'61 WU ruocsed by t be cost& at OCMC WU tbe e rem en t system =-~~tMY otlllr reli.t demtndtd '"""' w."e. ST JOHN, COlml't Clerk ,,.-primaTy t.arget ~ th e treasurer IWlll Swanger said v .. ,...:, ..-t111 w.tce et 141 '"-tr ,,....., "'°"' .. .,,_ ...,. .,.._ Assembly, would m a k e atud.i&S Thomu told tile money re,...esented the • anr matnw ctt1flklff w1111 t111 -•11 Wiit ,,. Strttt, su11a 1111 1toT1c1 o, TRu1T1a•s SAL• ' . r-.ialld llr t1111 --Sll<ll ........ y L• """'"' Giii....... M l1 Ml. 2·17" meetings of all city and supervisors. He suggeated county slbare of a Sln"Plus ...,. .. .,. -"" w11111i. t.,. "-111111 '*1' nm '"-;"5 ._, Ofl Mer 1, 1N1. •• 11 :00 o'cJoc:tt A.M .•
ty ad . d coosolidation of moet =· that devel.-..A last yeM at1t9' I~ tllh Ml-fW flllftl • wrt""' ~-or!ll Coast Olllv "''°' et""' South f,_,t t11trtnce lo tM C-~ COUD VlSOry gI'OUpS 8D , , ..,ti"" •laMIM te Ille etmitl.llnt. u 11111 . ~· ..;. Courthouse, In the Cltv o1 Santi Ana. and maintenance fUnc ona--'WOOn eat'nin(OS from the '41 Oiled Mllr. 2', 1H8. APrll 9• lG. 14• lffl -Clllf«nla, WESTERN MUTUAL CO•·
work committees open to million retirement. fu'lld ex· <SEAL> w. E. sT JOHN, c1e111 LEGAL NOTICE ~~~.~1~~~ ,f.:"='•oi c,~,:;~ : the public and press. Cur· · ceeded &II ~ted 4 per· av J11nu A. Noble Herold w. Heitz ind Tiier-IC. Htltt.
By
Bill Asks
..
'I
LEGAL NOTICE
U th B A_. BO AT BUFFS t Oellvtv Clerk "·*" lwlblnd aflcl wlte, and recero.11 June 14 _ ren y e rown ..,. coven " cen . DONALD •• SMALLWOOD CHTll'IC&TI! Of' IUSINISS. lHS, In loolt 7SSI, P11pe 1, OI Offfclll
Divorces only meetings of city COUD· About $1.6 million was ·all· 1617 Wastdff Dr. Svlla lt4 ,-1CTITIOUI NAME 11-ds of Orange Countv. C11i!Of'11l1 Al"'o" lockaboy It tha Hly ..: · ted _,. N--9 ltadl. C111f twt Tiit undtraltn<ICI -. ~llY IM Is 11von to MCU•• en lndebl«lnau In , • .,.,. -11-and b 0 a rd s of 111c1pa . a"'~ actual eaTJl· T ........ : '46-JIH • conductl111 • MIMSS et 14)41 IHCll Of TAltTAN HOMES, INC .•• _,.,..,., ortw UJ.3 f11ll ·ti"'• bHilnt odltor ·-HE TE Violet MM P vt Jtmet Wood LJ w gS Were $1.8 miJli, 'on, • Alt9rMYPvbffa~ !.~ff c~_. 011.. lloulevard, Watmln1t.r, CtlllOnllt. -Ind S II DEVELOPMENT CO., t Porter, Jr. supervisors wor" nt en e11y n•wt'4!1J•r '""' "'""P -·· .. Piiot, llM 11ctttl<HI• firm name Of CROWN _.-anon. dOlne bvsln.u .. Mes& °''
EYM'" The cou~ league added a d-'•• ~•-•t• of L._. .. , ....... cts had ..._," ted --LE-GAL NOTICE 11 co""""" of 111e 1o11ow1111 ,,.,_, --•nd 11e1c1.,., ""ne by l"QJOll o1
,.amell ~ Evteltt vt Albert 0. ' 111 Ore119o COCltlty. Hit tllj The county and its spec:l-81 APt'll 16, U, 30 I nd Mn 7, 1He 6"'41 IUSINESS SALES and ltlltl Mid firm Mir Oevek!Pmenl Co .. t lolnf vt!ntuta,
Ema Rimrndtlmt> vs JtrnH lltm· u•r •n • ••• .,..... w:;i;cl COuu wU ~ neme In full and Pltce OI rtsldene:a llM breach of c.rt1ln oblltttlona stt11r9d
me-.... provision to the approval 1119 a114 yachiln9 HW1 h • more than hall ot the fll!nd's ,._,_ 1a aa 1011ows: • 111ere1w. nottce of w111c~ waa recorded
Alfi D. ArftOtd vt Robert J, Arnold dilly fHturo .f tho DAILY assets, Sw'"'"'°'er ~"id. on.,,. Cl!RTt,ilCATI 0,. IUSIMISS Arlene Hugllft, t03 Wtst 17111 Street. Jt11111rv I, 1961, In Boak 146. Ptlle\Ml, Of
Ed>ntd tt1e11ard Celderon va £rm• recommendation, a s.k 1 n g 'ILOT. ~uo """' n1.. l"kl1tleul """ "'"" cos11 Mffl, c111,.,..n11. ..id Oll1c111 ltKOrds, w111 MU et !"'bllc J~:rrl'OCY .,, 011111 T. Tracv that the state legislature '100,000 will go into the TIM ulldera11nec1 c1o 11ere1JY -''tr ""' 011
.., ~;:!.;~'!he. :::ri. '!:, ~~:·=..~1ci:r tttt'°' u~i:d Siii•'""' A. NICllflo 111 Jon H. NMll11t -li~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~i.ii®Unt.Y~~;..a;;dY~81l'C;;;;le;~~~;f!l'Y~~e~s;. -.I tllev ,,. condllcllnt en UPllolsf...v •UPPfv Slelt of C1flfor11l••,.Or•1111t Covntv: Stafff 11 Ille llrn1 Of Mle, wlfllOU! w.,.. L• M. J1CXlbson va Lindi J. Jac:olleOn make the amendments eiJf>. bulllltH-,, C6'Pt rtnerr. It lll E. flit St.. On iMill I, lffl, liifore 1'1\4, I NotjiV rtn"'tv 11 ),; title, -•loll or -Mllrv LoulM How1nl vs O'NHI Howard Senti Ane, Calllot'nli , vndtr tllt flcffllova ,.vbllc In alld for uld Stalt, HnoNllY cumbr1ncea, t111 l•ternt COflVtv., to 11111
SlllY M. C1lllovn ... Rldllrd c . ject to the Assembly and N~ 0 ' I c E firm nt1M <If Al l"OAM/FABlllC .. •PPHred Arlene Mvt!Ma ~ to .... -llefd by 11ld Tt"Utfte v!ICMt w ld o..-C1llloull Sena•.e. UPHOLSTERY SUPPL y co. •nd Ille! to be Ille "'"°" wlloat ,. ..... Is sybKrib-of Tru1t, In Ind to tlle folloWllll detcrfbed Alme M. O'OoMtlf va. Menrv O'Qon. " u ld firm Is comPOttd ol Ille lollowlno ed lo tltt wlthl" Instrument end prQl>ertv, lo-wll~
ntH. The State ' -Ague of Cities J. FILIPPI WINERY STORE oeraons, W!I ... ,,.,,.,., In tulf al\d pleua •cknowll!d91C1 sht ext<:Utlld Ille um•. Loi IO of Tred 50'!3, .. "'°""" on ,,_ Loreltf D. ltrretl vs 01le E. ltrreff ..,... of residence lrt .. tollo""" lo-wll: !OFFICl1'L SEAL) recorded In look 112 P11et 3S to 31 of
Judv Kay Yount "' ft09tr l!lllo" l\nnt\SeS the bill a• '--l-g HAS MOYID PIOM COSTA MISA Paul Kahn •nd Ruth Ke~n. 3!11 Vtl J-ph E. 01v1J MIKeff1neous M•"· record$ of OrtMI YOVl!O vrr-" u.:u~ .-NOW OnN Verde Ave., Lono a .. ch. C1I. HOtarv Pvblfc • C1H!Of'nf1 County, C1llfornl1.
June M. Mtllln "' CllW. J. Makin. Jr. ' • u n r e a s 0 n a b I e and Wltneu our hinds "''' 11111 d•V.,, APrll. Principal Office In For the PU._ Of N Yll\9 obll91tteo. Artllur SloMltreet .,. Sd\lr..... Mee Oii HltW llW. flt ~ ~ Mitt •wt11 of Oe,..11 0,..,. l'tMWlr 1HI Ortnte C<1<1ntr ae<llred 1w uld OMd lllCludlna feea. $.........,.., unworkable." ..,.._ eftW -!'Miii SM-mt Peul Kahn My CommlHIOll E•Plrn cll1n1n end Ill,__ ot .... Trutlft and ~le·~~vt~~~Mln -~=~==~------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ R~K-~Mv.rm ofu~ Merv Jona VI ltWrfllCe Wair.a J-• STATE OF CALIFORN IA 'ubllalled Or•nv• C~st D1llY Piiot. D1ted: April 9, ltA.
John Hud90ll McCVM va I.Hiit s. COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, "· "-rll t, f, 1', 23, 1'61 3AWI WESTEltN MUTUAL coa--McCvne On 1111• 11tll "" of Apr!I, A.O. IN&, POllATION. betor• me, llM undtraltned. I Noterv LEGAL NOTICK TrualH
Fire Call•
Unit Set
To Choose
New Aides
I
GARDElN GROVE - A
commletee to nominate can·
didates f&r two offices in the
Orange C.ounty League of
Cities has been named by out:eomg presiderrt George
Honold of Garden Grove.
T h e committee will sug-
gest successors to Honold.
wbo w. cWeated last week
in bis bid to be reelected to
the dty council, and Duane
Wintlen, Fullerton COUD·
clliMn W'bo was a l 1 o
def~at.ed. Wint'ers has been
lOCal league representative
to the ltate league for tile
put four years.
N o m.inating committee
members are Mayor Jack
Hileman, Orange; Mayor
Paul Grober, New port
Beach. and Mayw Victor
MJcbel, Placentia.
Court Set
In KiJJing
Ellie Wichman of o.rden
Grove, accused ol killing
ber police eergeent husband.
will face preliminary hur·
tng In West Orange County
Judlcil.J District C o u r t
Wednelday.
She ii charged with the
tilllog u Sgt. H e n r y
Wicmnan, 88, during an etr·
]J m<l"fti.na argument in
t>eir borne April 7. Sbe Is
beillg h e 1 d 13 the Orange
County Med.loll C e n t e r
ptyeb!Atrie ward.
P'Olice charge that Mrs.
Wichman, 31, fired twkt at
her hUlband wtth hi• .38
caUbe.r aervice revolver. He -o
\\elibe
happy to help
breakup
your home.
Nobodyma..,..._impftMmmtammepainlrn thanus: noth-
ing down, and u long u eight years to pay. (That eight-year provision
can be quite a boon. For instance, adding a $SOOO bedroom-and-hath,
or a $SOOO kitchen, would aet you back $97.08 a month if you repay in
36 months. But only $45.00 a month repaying in eight years.)
Dodt toada tbllt ~We make loans for home improvements <X>Jn-
pletcltC:parate &om your mating b~me mort~ge. We don't go into long,
comp tcd rcfinanang, we don't flail around m red tape. We make it DO
more complicated, once you contact us, than getting a car loan.
Theflnepdat. Our maximum home improvementlomia $7500-which
can add a lot of houae to your ·
house. Onloanaover$2000,our
chargeif $5.50 per$100 peryear.
,..._.!pedal We puah home
improvement loans like they
wereonapec:ialevayday. (Some
banks consider them on::~J
headache.) .And we don't
OD caem~,eve:n though we're
a $900 million bank. we'll nm
quote paymen11 over the phone,
in cue you and your wife are
conridering being home wreck·
as, and are juat wondaing how
far you can aff'onl to go.
Pubffc In 1nd tor u ld Countv I nd Sllle, By Floy Van V111ttnburtll,
l'etldlnt tllereln duly commluloned end p.2f75' Vlc.t Prealdtnt
swern, oenonellv 8PPHrlCI "•ul Kihn CIRTlfllCATI Ofl IUSIMISS 2'ltS end Ruth Kahn. known to m1 to be Ille Pubfl111ed OrtllOt Coul Ollty Plltf, • i:;'°;,~1~,ru~~. :~ !~=i:.: Tllo unc:r1~!:.!~~u~~~11tv lie ts APrll 16, 21, JO, !Me 121•
to me !NI tlleY •xecut..i Ille urne. condlicllM a tivalneu at 2323 l!HI
In Wlln.u Wllereot, 1 hav• tl«rNnto aet Cont Hi.tlwav. Coron• del Mor. P.
my h1nd and •lflxtd mv offl,111 ... , Ille ?ie11~.:: .... ll~lflor~!~ ~ "~'o J.h~ e:.r.:..~ YHr In tllls certllh:•te first lbove MODERNIZING SEltVICES Ind "''' Mid ClllTll'ICA:.~ SUSIMISS.
(OFFICIAL SEAL) firm 11 composed of ll>e lollowl119 person, l'ICTITIOUS MAME
PlllllP Sllverm111 WllOa& narnt In 11111 Ind Pllct OI rtsl~ The vndll'lltned does cerllfv he fa co...
Not1rv Publlc<1Utornla " 1' follows: dVclllll • bln!MU · 11 ~ "A" Avtnlde PrlnclP•I Office In Lloyd tlernett, 2067 Vlal1 Otl Oro, Sevlllt, lffllnt Hiiia, Cefltornla, VftCIW Los ~let Counlv NIWPOrf l eech, Calllornl1. the lldflleu$ flrm name of LAGUNA
MV Commlnlon ElQllres Dttecl ,,,,_ u. lt61. HILU INVESTMENT GROUP •nd ""' 1'ut 7 1961 Lfovd larneH said firm la comPOWd of tltt toH-11l9
'hlb SI~. AltY. Stale Of C1lllornl1, Orange County: ""°"' wttose n1me In tull end Pleet of f11 N La Cl-I llvt On Morell 25, 1'61, before me, I residence la H tollowl· us .......... C1I. ..... Not1ry ,ubtk Ill I nd tor Mid St1le, Sam A. OtVlt, ·~ "A" A...,ldt
T•h ftlJ) US..Mal """'""Y I PHtr FIO'fd l1mett ~ Stvlflt, Lttvna Hiiis, Callfo<l{fl. cm« lo me lo be tfle ---neme Oi led Jenu1rv lt. !NI
'vbfls!Md Ortntt Cota! Otllv Piiot. ~·lld·~= ~ t:;• 0:~~ ::'~'::"' Sim A. Olvla Aprlt 16, 23, JO 1nd MIY 7, 1,.. 427-41 (OFFICIAL ~I.) · Stele of C111fotftl1, Lea Alltltlts COlllllY:
LEGAL NOTl1-JOHOll E 0 1 Ofl Jan. 31, 1ffl, !>Ho,. me, • Hotll'Y
"'"" Notary Pub!~~Celflornla Pubflc In •"4 tor Mid St•te, ,..,_,.,IV
I NOTICI 011 OISIOLUTIOM P I I I Offl I _,_,... Sam A, Dtvla kn°""" lo me to
Nollet Is hereby tlven ltlltt Ille 0~1"!.:' C<1<1n;,• " be IM ""°" ..._ n11M ls •vMcrllleof oertnershlP lleretolOre 1xlall111 between MY Commluloll Eulres tO 11\e wfllll11 lmlrvment •!14 •dtlloWled" ANDRE llftUNET AND JACK OU 110110 Jvne Jl, 1970 ed he e~eevted !tit Nme.
8 eo111rtnerslll• dollll bualMH under Ille Published Or.no• Coeal D•ilv ,..lot, ISEALl I I M. Does
flrrn ,,.,,.,. end stvle OI ARTISTIC Mllrcll » end Aprfl 2, '· "· ,,.. .,,... N"t p bll CARPET$ OP' ANAHEIM ti 16$.1 WHI O try U C Llncoln, Cltv of AMllelm ntol, Sim of LEGAL NOTICE Stile of C.ntornl1. C1fllornle, w11 on Ille 3111 day of Ml•cll. Prll'dPal Office In
1'61 dluolved bv rnu11n11 con-t 11\d Ort nft Count¥ !tie '.,,.1111draw1I tram Mid tlrm o1 JACK ,..lnlJ WILCOXIM & TIMGLRll DU IOltD .... mo SllllO 1'2. It-.....
Seid tMlnen In llM tututa wfll be con-NOTICI! AND CIRTl,.CATI ~ Miiia. Cellferllll
dudtd by ANDRE BltUNET. wlll slllll be ~tD~~·:·~m~:.o~~,~~i::: A=~ °""" Coast Dilly
aoltlv retPOMll>lt fOr •II tr1M1dl-of TIM undtraltntd do htrttw etrtlfv tllat AllJl'll '" 2:1 '° and !MY 7 UM = 11ld bvalnet1. t II• wflhd"wl"' 1t1m1er fhty ere P4r!Mrt In ""' PlrfMnlllP ' '
Nlvlnt terminated rellllOM .... ,.In. lrtnMdlni llvalness In Ille s1111 Of
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE 01ted: Attrll I, Ifft. CelllQNllt U114Mr Ille fktll10us NIM af
ANDRE IRUNET RIVIERA l!NTl!ll,.RISH wltll t1M ptln--------------• •nM>C CIPll Pl.ICAl of t>uslneu •• 2515 Ocffn p.2t127 • Pvblfslled °''"'' Cotat OtllY "'lot, lloul1v1rd, •• ,, Coron• dtl Mir. Countv .c1an .. 11:ATI 011 IUllNUlt I
APrll 16, ,... 6J0.4t of Or•1111•. C11ftornl1 nus. TIM "'"'" l'ICTITIOUS NAM• • end pft~n Of rasldanct Of ••ell Of Ille Tiit undersltllld '-e1rt11Y ht h • • Nrfnlr& trt H tolloWs: condvcllno I bvllneu II 8072 V1lt11c:fa t
Miiton H. Handman, n7 Wet! $evtntll Drlw, Hvnlf111ton Betcll, Clllllomle. ' '
,. .• --Street, Lea """""' Celltornl.I f0017. under Illa fldlt9-""" 1111M tt CAL.-
LEGAL NOTICE
....,.. L1urenct Boothe, Tnislff Undtr ltlV..CO end tllet Mid ffrm la cOtflCICIMd
ClltTl,..CATI 0,-S USINISS, O..:ltrtllon of Tl'\llf det.d Mllrcll 1, OI tM folloWl111 ""°"' ....... """' PICTITIOUI NAMR 1M1, 292.S O<:Mn Bouirvard. 8-1 Corelli !ft Ml and Jtltet Of l'ftldellce Ill •
Tiie vnderalonecl -certlfY ha 11 con-dtl Mir, Cllltemlt mu tolloWs: dueflllf • bosllWH at l194 Iowa Street, O•t.d: Merell 12111, lffl. Chtrlts G. Ruble, eon V1ltllcl1 Drlvt,
Coshl Mee, Clllfornle, under tlw lie-Mlllo<l H. Ht ndm•n HU11tl11tlon IHcll tfllO<la firm 111rnt ol PltO-TEC.,llOP Ind Liurenct ~. Oiied Aprff 1, lffl.
""' H id firm II com-..1 of Ille follow· Trvafff u....-0.Clltlllofl Cllltlet G. llllbll
Int -son. wllOM "'"" In tull •l!d ... CAI of Tl'Vll dlltd Mlrcll 1. '"' Sltle of C.llfornl1. Ot111!1t Covnf\I: of •·Hldelle• It IS tolloWI: STATE 01" c;Al.ll'OllNIA 1 On Aprll 1. ,,.., before me •• Notary Robert E. G1V11I, :nt4 low1 $1rtet, COUNTY 01" LOI ANOE.I.ES l u Pvblfc In and tor Mid St1tw, --llY
Cost• Mesa. c.111orn11 mu. On Mlll'dl ""'· ..-. belore me. • •-"4 CMrtes G. llulllt knawn to
D11'1d April I, '"'· Not•rv l'ut>llc In 9lld fer •Ml Stitt, -to be "91 ...,_, .._ name ltollOrt E. Gtvel _,,., -red Mll!on H. HilldfN11 la aulllcrllled to the Wltlllll l..ir-t
Slate of Clllfoml1, 0!'111 .. Ceulltv: k-to mt t. bl t11t Nf'IOll wflOllt 1!111 l clt,_lldted llt o@Cllled Ille llmt.
011 APtll f, 1'6&, btfo,.. IM, I Not1rv MIM It tubKrlbed to 1M wltllln 1 ... IOFl"ICIAL SEALI
Pui>Uc In Ind tor Mid Sl1fe, P8f'IOlllllV sfTIMrltnt Ind ldUIOW..... lit uKVfed 0«11 M.. llublt appeared ltobffl £. G1v•I k-to rn1 lo Ille ,.,... Nolarv Pvbflc • Clllfornl•
be !tie person -. name II ~llltd (Ol"fllCIAl S!ALl Prl'l(l .. I Offlc:a 111
to the within ltUlrument and tdtMWltda-Htllft 11.. IC•Y Ort1101 Countv Id 11« uecuted Ill• .,,.... Norarv Public • Ctllfornl• Nn v11enc11 0r1 .. , (OFFICIAL SEAL) PrlllCl .. I Office 111 HUlllllllllll hid!. C.llf. ,_., E. 01\111 Lot ~ta countv c:om. S1111. a.1. It, 1m
NotaN Pubnc • Cllllor'nl• My Commluloll ex.,1ru Publlalled °""" C-1 Del~ "''°' PrlllCIHI Ofl!Q In S.01. 21. 1Ht .-.;11 2. 9, , .. »,. ,... ~
Orenee County STAT! OF CALi..ORNIA MY Gommluloll h ... rlt COUNTY 01" ORANGE ) U
JUM 21, 1'10 On Merell t4111, lNI, ~· me, I 'ubl/llltCI °'"'"Coast 01llY ,..lof, Nollrv """'le 111 11\d fer Mid Stat., -------------AJ>rll t, 11, J3, all, 1ffl JIMI ffnoMllV I-Ired Wllrtne:e ltO!fle, Orltlllll ..-f Iii h Ofl1CIO f/I the
LEGAL NO'nCE
Trwtte ~ 0Kltrlllell OI TMt ....., ~ ._., tit °"9fttO Cbllllfy, LEGAL NOTIC!. """'"' '· tNt. •-1o ,,.. to .,. t11e 1,:;n* °" ,.,... • ~ Ho. , ' • -H,_ w'-Nme Is .-.Crlbtd .. the ,..;... tit Uf 1't tlf ....... .......... • Cl•Tt,tUflO,' IUllNI& ~";,..""""""'' eftd KMow ...... hi NOTtea Oii ••UCM AtfD Dll'AULT • .. ~
lllCTITIOU' ffAMR !OFl"ICIAI. S~j AllD 0 ,. ll.ICTIOll TO CAUll IALe
The "'*'91tntd dolt ~1¥ ... " -Lllnt n Oollttlll o .. •UL ... °" •• "' UllD•• D•I O
duct1111 1 ~ 11 '17 *"1111 Martlot, Notary ,.~le· Ctl!WllM .,. faUIT , • • f
An111elm. C41ffof'11t1, undtr tM fleflt!tul l'tfllC ... I Ofllce 111 CMM--T.-... fl., .• I
tlnn -Of ,..OHlllt l'OOL SlllVICI C>-c-~ IN THI M&TTS!t .. tM Otld "' '• •
CO. IM 11Mt llld """ 11 ~ o1 t11t My C:-IMltll ~rat Trust tnMt IW I(....... A. ·-• fOllllWlnt ,,.,_ wllOtl lltrnt lfl fllll t llf MMcll S. Im alld l!ltlfll G. lllOd9tft. flwMlld l !llf
piece flf mkftne:I It ae ftlllWt: l'AalClll. fl4R.'-t1Cl!I wtfO '-"~· rbtl THlt h*1t1nct l t H1nild E.. Htvs, !"'51 Wtle!llWM 1COM\.Met1a. CLAlllC a O'MAU • .._!_'!'!,! 1 , ... • ,,..,.,.., CS.ttd
Lene. Norffl HOltywoed, C.l~IL &.......,. C> ....... ._ -~ Janverv Otltd l\Urdl U, I... ... ...,_ °""9 ....... It. tt'7, II ~ Ito. 47SI, Ill ~ J . H1t0td I!. HIYI ... ,._,.., c....,,. .... ,. look .,.,, p-DI til Offldtl aeeords. • ~
state flf c.11ton111, Ot-c-itv: l"llllllllllW o .. ,.. Coaet Deity Jltlot, 111 ftlt flllct tf ftlt Cllllfltr fitoc:ordtf i t Oii ""'11 S. 1 ... .....,,. me, 1 NotWY ""'1 f, 16. n, Je, ltte *41 If Or-c-tv. C.llttrllla, tteUrl!lf
,.ubllc 111 11111 '°" Niii Sltfe. -HW -tilllet -~I ,... flor :":.'" ..::"' ~ ~"':"' .:.C~ LBGA.L NOTICE :~~ ~o.":" .:,.. " MAC:NAa ! .
to t11t Wftflln 1""'-f _, ~ NOTICI /IS HHHY OIVIN llllt • • ' ..i M alllWtM 1111 ..,... P4'116 • lw'tt<ll d Ill tibl!Nfl«I fol' w!lltll • •
($EALl CftT'l~T9 9' C ...... .,. .... """ MN DIM I/If T1'M It • -~ Illa
Nit °'""' ~"'°" Oii! aus1•na Otta• ~ .... "' Ht ·w.. 11et '*" • ~~':*~~--~-v·ti:1.-.=1D eotll"OllAT~ ;;;._~~ ==~~:.:~t i:
Loa ........ c-tv ....... e .. '""~"'~ .. ""·-·"~; ~ MY ~-..... t ~ t t )M ~. _,.,.IY IMtl"""""' .... • I. 1"*"9rv I, .,,_, C.-,_., ....... ! •• ~ 1111 t. NOTICS I• ... "IBY GIVl!N that ii 1 *•
P'IAMlllMd ~ c..t °'"' "'"'' -""" -flt -TH QA,, IV,._ ..... Ma .._ 1N41t Ill 1111 f Mtll t. , .. u ... IM ... Dl'VlllON -........ firm .. _...., .... "*'°' -Iii ...... tloll ef 11ld a • If Ill~ ..,_tllll. .... ..-, Tnmort Cllfllllall!M IH ,.., .. l"IPll 4 ttt •
0.01 flioeo f/f !Mi"-II H follewl1 lectfoll A ef Mid DIM df TMI, lo • . ~.:::-=.:~~1~.~-ii~J:,,==~ .. ........ ~IJN,!!' "' llW .,.\i;"T.;"",_ .t ""-,......,, "° tile ~t111ftel1rv • ClllT~~g;~~ ..:=...... ~r. ,_ --........... ~ ~-=• ~·=~ ti ...... ,. tllf OonMUef!t \ :
TM~ .. ,~ Ill It~ UI It . .........,, 1'llrt It -..... end -Id -a ......... II hi t• ....._. ,.,.,,.... llN ..,._ h 111111 -' tllAllO,DO ltf'lntfNI. ltOdl. Call'-11. ~ .,. ~flew ~ ... ., 1M I..,.,_ ,.__ from June JO. 1'-1.
111'111 -et ICltYITAL la.IAtl °"' ITATI Qfl CAL~lllA. tly ,_ t/f IOW w.dl 11111 dtfav"• ' • llltt .. ~ W ~ flf 1111 ....... COUlfTY Ott OltANOR. -. It ._ ..,_ 4ICliWtd tlla! t11t ..,,... 0 ! \ '"' --· ...... -·.,, ""' ... .... °" .... 1't -.. .,,. .. A.O. ,... ti .... .,...,.. ....... "' tfld llOt. : fll ,..._ la ., "'"""" ...... IN t "'90IY P9lllk )II Mf •Ill all tllllt MM NQltld W Mid .!<tt~ L_!!!!!l'.:~~1-~~ ~ :..:-.. c:.::, .. :.,,:,~.iw.= 0... ~ TIWt II ~IY flltJJ= t •
19 ..
' I
. ' .
---~..------·--.. ........-.---. ____ -.,.........., .......... -ts -h >r -• I ... ----...
8 OAIL Y PILOT
'our ltlmaeg'• Worth
Priva te Healtl1 Plans Grow
th • \'l,\'IA PORTER
A reC'ord l 8 :i . 0 0 0 . o o n
Americans now are covered
by ~ome form or pr1valt>
twalth insuranc-e . the llealth
ln~urance fnstitutP has JUSI
rPport£1d. This 111 :11.000.000
more than wcrt covered as
rccentlv as 1960
l .ast 'year we. the m1wrl'd.
recC'ivcd a pe11k SI I billion
in private health msurance
bf>oehts. almMt cl n H b I ,
1!>61l's $.1 7 b1thon This 1s in
addition to the bllhoni< m
benefits paid 1wt under rhe
M e d l cart'·Mrdica1d pro·
gr<1m
To d a y . 11np reccdl'ntccl
numbers or us arc covered
by irroup health insurance
plans with employers payiniz
in hill the cost~ or coverage
of nearly two.thirds.
ARE WE. then. reaching a
point where we, as a nation.
can sit back and relaJC
t1espite skyrocketing doctor
and hospital bills?
Emphatically NO
Private health lns11rant·r
today pays only one.third nf
011r total medical bill. Onr in
rive Americans is n o I
C'OV~ by any group hu1th
Insurance policy and more
than 37 million have no
private heaJth inimrance at
all Most of these are
A11wr1cans who need ~uch
c o v e r a ~ f' the most.
f' m p I o y e s or 11mall
brnsine~scs, rarm laborers.
ho11i1chold helper~ t h e
unt>mployed.
Huge gaps still exist In the
types of services prud for by
most health 1 n s u r a n c e
pollcif's. llsually excluded
are c o s t I y rehabilitation
arter an accident or a
stroke, maternity and nf'w
baby care, eye care. private
nurses. nursmg hQmf' care
Mental hf'alth services also
are severely limited.
ONLY A FRACTION or
us~ 61.000.000. are protectrd
against <·atastrophic illness
through major medical m·
surance. The typical health
insurance policy c o v e r s
hospital slays of no loni?er
than two to three months.
The maximum bencr.t pro-
vided by mo1<t health In-
surance po I i c I r s rnr
hoi;pitalization i~ way below -,
A1tMuM"'c free lec;tures for investors in Mutual f'un4•:
HOW WELL DO
MUTUAL FUNDS
PERFORM?
What is the record or the mutual funds? How well did
they perform during the 1966 market decline? How
did they perlorm 1n 1967? Coutd they-hav~ advantag&s
for tt\e growth·minded investor-or should he be
cautious?
To help you decide, Goodbody 1s holding one session
seminars. designed to clear up questions you may
have about those mutual funds. These sessions-pn·
marily for investors already fam1har with Mutual Funds
-will attempt to probe into areas generally not
covered by the usual investment seminars-including
the important income and growth situations.
Whether your aim 1s possible long·term growth ol
czoital or higher income, or a conservative approach,
we believe you will find this adval'lced seminar m06t
interesting.
NEWPORT BEACH
TUESDAY-APRIL 16 OR 23
Conducted by:
Dennis L. Halloran
WEDNESDAY -APRIL 17 OR 24
Conducted by:
Paul Skillman and Jim Chadburn
Goodbody & Co.
4501 Birch Street
(adjacent to Orange County Airport)
Gl GOODBODV & CO
ISTA9L1'Hf0 101
Mo ... h rr el /00<1 .. o S•ocl ••d c.,..,.Od••1 r.c.1 ...... ,
'501 BIRCH ST., NEWPORT BlACH • 540·812"
Owr 90 Offlc" throurflout ttl• H•'*t
llNlll
1111•11
Loans Now
At $287,800
For you ••• 'ourteay •nd c•n~lne frltJtdlineu.
for your uvlnp ••• hlrhut earnrn1s rn fn1ured safety. 51.% =.i",.::: BOLo :.1~~~ mi. of 7CJ for a )..,,
... • ~" llMae ........ ,,.. ~--llntNef ,... .. -ei C4ftlflnlle '""* ,....,.. ., lh•lC!tl\ Mm~"'• 1tt: .... Ule '°"' :::u::. ".,""'"!el• 01 ••• OQQ. AllC*IMI ...... ti $19.000 '7 • r-..i ._.,.q. t~
U H ,.IWl'OllT
OVER THE COUNTER
~arden Grove resident
Robe.rt L. Sohre.Iner -has
bHn named •••htant
cashier in dltrge Of ope:r •· tions at Ule F~ Valley
branch of Bank ot America.
ScbrftMT joil'Mld Bink of
Ameriu oo an o ff l c e r
traioina program Ill UIM.
For five ~an prtor to tbat
he operated a frmdtlse ln
San Dieto for • Md.inl
re9taurant cbajn.
A naltive ol LOI ).Qeeta,
Schmner b • ~ oi
El Cajon Valley Hl&b School
and attended S. ~o
State eou.. u. * com· Pkhd ' •wnl ~ of.
ttudy off«"ed by l h e
Americ9n l~ of Bent· Ina .
Schreiner ti""" Ill mt
WHCmtnswr llvenut.
, ..... =.
of A
r
~
lei' -bas
•tan t t opera-
11 Valley
.merlu.
Bao(
'f I ctr
Ill 19116. '° tNt cbi9e ln
JHdinf
~.
hate ol
11 School
Diego
II eom-
rwea of
the
If Beak·
• mt
-. ---.....,......
,
DAIL y PILOT ' I
Aineriean
---,------------------------........................... +e .........
. -• ..... •···· ., ••• ,•,•r•• r~·~· . .. . . . . ... .. _..,, ... -...... -. -~~ ....
J 0 D.AJI. Y PILOT T~. Alll11 16, 1968
Angels Stagger Home .After Niglltmare .Trip
Bill Rigney had to admit that ln his
14 years of baseball managing he's
never experienced a trip quite like the
l)ne his California Angel.$ ju;,l returned
from
And. the genial Cherub boss made
io bones about h.is desire to forget the
series Of nightmares that transpired
on and off the playing field as the
Halos limped back to Anaheim with a
pair of wins and three shutout losses
to show for their week in the East.
They were off today and open at
r\.naheim Stadium Wednesday night
3gainst the Yankees.
Most recent blanking was a 7-0
masterpiece by senor Camilo Pascual
of the Washington Senators.
Ile matched Monday's egg roll at
the White House by rolling nine zeroes
on the Angel score by innings.
SPORTS
CLIPPED
SHO RT
From the Wires of AP /UPI
LOS ANGELES -Perry T. Jones,
president of the Southern Caillornia
Tennis Assodation. has sent a letter to
the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association put-
ting Los Angeles in the running for en
open tournament.
The USLTA bas ruled that only four
open tourneys wUJ be permitted in the
United States this year. Jones said
that the West Side Tennis Club in
Forest Hills. N. Y .. site of the national
amateur championships for years, has
the inside track for an open tourney in
Septfltlber.
Jones said h i s letter expressed the
desire of his organization to bold the
U. S. Open Championship but he said
they'd settle for just one of the four
opens.
The USLTA won't make its choices
for the opens until later this spring. It
will be the first time in ttie United
States that amateurs a n d pro-
fessionals compete against each other.
...... ...... ......
SAN FRANCISCO -A Mayor"s ad-
visory committee has recommended
the demolitJon of Candlestick Park,
home of the San Francisco Giants. and
construction of a 55,000..ieat domed
stadium.
The committee, appointed by Mayor
Joaepb Alioto. recommended Monday
that th e stadium, large enough for
football, be built In ih.e beart of the cl-
ly to be easily acceulble to the most
people.
MONTREAL -Clarence Campbell,
National Hockey League president,
slapped fines totaling $.1,800 on St.
Louis Blues and Philadelphia Flyers
players Monday for their part in a
brawl at the Philadelphia Spectrum
Saturday during a West Division
playoff game.
Hardest hit were the clubs' coaches.
Coach Keith Allen of Philadelphia will
pay a personal assessment of $500.
while his counterpart, Scotty Bowman
oC St. Louis. was fined $400.
SAN DIEGO -In San Diego, hockey
fans can Arnie Schmautz Of the
Portland Buckaroos "The Pest." a
compliment to hJs great defensive
ability.
But Monday n.lgbt the San Diego
Gulls, playlng on theJr home court,
kept Schmautz off Western Hockey
Lf'ague goal t1cortng leader Len
Rcm'son and the GuUs won, 4-3.
PITTSBURGH -The Pittsburgh
Pipers announced Monday that the
opening game against New Orleans fo~
the American Basketball Association
championship wiU be held here Thurs-aay.
JRVINE GOLFE RS
CLOBBERED, 50-4
' UC Irvine s goU team was shelled bv
USC's nationally ranked team at Santa
Ana ~untry Club Monday, 50-4.
lrvme, now 2·5 on the season, plays
\JC San Diego Friday afternoon at
Mission Viejo Country Club in a l p.m.
match.
' The Trojans, wbo placed second to
'°'o. 1 ranked Houston at the recent
New Mexico Invitational, were led by
\tic Loustalog's 69.
UCI scoring: Steve CUtler, 80; Bob
Allen: 81 ; Cbtis Wilson, St : Terry Zito, 84: Rich Kerns, 85, and Jim Bragstad rz. .
ln doing so be recorded the 2,000th
American League strikeout of his
career to become the only active
junior circuit hurler to boast of such
an achievement.
Chuck Hlnton had the dubious
distinction of becoming KO victim
.t.•rll 17 AnMts vi fffw Yor11 7: U '·"" l(MPC (110) APrll 1• ....... ls v• H .. Yorlt 1:9 •. 111. !CMPC 1n•1 Al>rl ' An .. b YI hlfl"*'• 7:SS 0.111. i<M~ no
number 2,000, going down swinging in
the top of the fourth inning.
Pascual continued hls uncanny
mastery over the Angels (he's 14-5
lifetime against them) by scattering
seven hjts -the only extra *e blows
being Bobby Knoop's triple and dou·
ble.
''Our young hJtt«• ftl'e too im·
patient" Rigney confides. "Pucual
changes spetd a lot and our kids just
haven't learned to watt.
"But we'll get going pretty soon."
One W asblngton r~rter tried to
console the Halo clllef by saying,
"Look at Jt Ws way ... you're still
alive. U you'd have played at night
like you were originally scheduled to
do you might bave W'Oll. But then there
might have been a riot. too."
Washington, loser of it4 first tlu-ee
starts. erupted at the plate after
starter Sammy Ellis had beld the
Senators in cbeei for 4 1/3 lnoing1. In
that time he'd given up a home run to
Ken McMullen, allowd no other base
runners and struck out seven.
He set five down in a row w'lth
strikes before disuter struck in the
IN THE STILL OF THE NIGHT -Baseball !ans at the Astrodome
Monday night took three stretches -for the seventh, 14th and 21st
innings. In the Jongest night game in major league history, the Astros
wt oi the fifth. "Sammy started com·
ing ih too blgb," explains pitching
coach Mickey McDennott. "Tbat'I
when they started to get to him."
Washington ripped the newly ac·
quired Angel for six hits in the frame,
Including four doubles and a pair of
41ng1es.
Reliever Jack Hamilton came in and
finally put out.the fire .Ct« five l'UDI
bad been scored and 10 men bad come
to the nlate.
So it was that the Rignei.._m,en fell to
a third shutout . . . each With a Balo
victory sandwiched iD befyveen.
But that was only part of the ad·
versity which caused Rig to term this
his most bizarre road venture ever.
Other misbal,?S included: ( 1 )
Wednesday night'' plane fire which
resulted in the team's evacuation from
the airship aod 00 IQJuriet;
(2) Rlgney's liege with tt\e flu which
sidelined him from being in uniform
till Moada.y ;
. (3) Don Mincher beinc beaned in
WHITE
WASH .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.
_eunnna
Cleveland. Be was to be releesed from
the hospital today. However, tealJl of·
ficlala have' not learned when he'll be
Ul'IT ........
beat the Mets in the 24th iruilng, 1--0, on a Met error. There were about
1,000 fans left when the game ended at 1:37 a.m. Th~ Astro manage-
ment served breakfast to writers in the press box.
Rocking Sam
Sparks Celts
Past 76ers
Longest Night Game South Africa
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Sam
Jones isn't ready for a rocking chair
just yet.
The 34-year-old sharpshooting guard
of the Boston Celtics may need a
breather now and then . but he's as
tough as ever in the clutch. If you
don 't believe it. ask the Philadelphia
76ers.
Philadelphia was all set Monday
night to finish off the Celtics in thefr
best-of-7 game Eastern final in the Na-
tional Basketball Association. The
76ers led 3-1 and were at home belore
a selklut crowd of 15,202. Everything
pointed to a B06ton fade out.
Something went wrong with the
script. Boston won 122-104. Old and
tired Sam Jones fired in ~ polnu.
As You Might Guess-
A Met Error Ends It
HOUSTON (AP) -The Judge was
ready for bed. a coach bad only one
chew of tobacco left and the bats
weighed more than the trees from
which they were hewed.
It was at this critical point in the
24th lnrung that Houston's Bob
Aspromonte stroked one of Lee Rohr's
p.itches toward Al Weis near second
base and the New York Mets'
shortstop muffed it to let in the only
run in the Astros' 1-0 victory early to-
day.
The error ended the longest night
game in major league history and cut
short by two innings of equalling the
longest baseball game ever played.
"The bat felt like 81h pounds."
Aspromonte said. "That was the
longest week I ever played. I've just
won three of five ball games for this
club. do you realize that?"
cond on a balk.
Rohn. the eighth Met pitcher, gave
Jim Wynn an intentional pass. Ru.sty
Staub was thrown out. the runners ad·
vanclng. Then John Bateman was in-
tentionally walked to fill the bases.
At that point Aspromonte hit the
grounder that Weis bobbled.
"No, it didn't take a bad hop." Weis
said. "I just blew il It went right
between my legs."
The longest night game previously
played was Washington's 22-inning. 6-5
victory over Chicago on June 12, 1967.
Tbe longest National League night
game was played Sept 1. 1967 when
San Francisco defeated Cincinnati 1-0
in 21 innings.
The Astros-Meb game also broke
the record time consumed by a Na-
tional League night game. requiring
six hours and six minutes to complete.
Stands Firm,
Official Says
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(AP) -Frank Braun, president of the
South African Olympic G a m e s
Association, said Monday night his
opinion is that South Africa should not
accede to any request to withdraw
from the Olympic Games.
Commenting on the arrival here
earlier in the day of A very Brundage,
International Olympic C o m m i t t e e
president, Braun said, "My personal
view is that if Mr. Avery Brund.age
bas come to the Republic to.ask South
Africa to withdraw from the Olympic
Games, we should not accede but
stand firm on the vote taken at Greno-
ble."
Braun emphasized that this was his
opinion and any decision on the issue
would have to come from the associa-
tion's-exlllltive committee as a ~y. ''When you're down 3-1," said Old
Sam after he finished shooting up the
76ers. "Yoo just pull up your socks
and get the job done.''
aonOlll ,MIUOIL,MIA
Embnl
Gr-m k.llvllctlt
Howell
SJ-lltltoft
lllMid S.ndfo
SW.ltd TMdefl'
0 , T 0 , T
2 N ' Clla""""1lft 11 6·11 11
The victory was the fi(th ln si x
games fol' the National League leaders
since the season opened last Wed-
nesday.
About 1.000 persons of a game-open.
ing crowd of 14,219 were still in the
huge Aitrodome when the finish came.
Baseball Standings
0 .... 0 0....... ' ?-4 10 10 ,._., 1't Orftr • ... 20
• M 14 G-M I :M 1e II 1-11 :r1 Jedi-2 ).4 7
7 1.1 U W.J-3 H t
A M t Wallt.. l "t 11
4 N l~loftl 0 1-3 1 0 w s • •• • • ~ 1:12 T-11 ~ 104 ._.....,...,.,.. Totab
9MIOll ... • l6 211 ll lt -17'
Plllt-lolll.t . .. . :n » 1' 1l -lei' ,,_ ~ -..... "· ""'IMltltN• ,,. "-'"'out -ai.tr!M. co-w. "--A~ -;s.•.
One of those was Judge Roy
Hofheinz. president of the Astros.
When the home half of the 22nd in.
ning started, the S2 million scoreboard
flashed : "The Judge says he's read>-
to go to bed ... let's score a run."
TWo innings later Norm Miller led
oft with a single and advanced to se-
okes 9-5 Choice
AMERICAN LEAGUE
w L Pct.
Minnesota ........ 5 0 1.000
Detroit .... , ...... 3 1 .750 Balthno~ ........ 2 2 .500
Boston ......... 2 2 .500
Cleveland 2 2 .500
Oakland .......... 2 2 .500
California 2 3 .400
W111.bJngton ...... 2 3 .400
New York ........ 1 3 .250 Chicago ........... 0 3 .000 ....,.. .......
........... 1, C.1""'1111 •
M~t .. ~J
Oll!l.r .. New YMI i
OMt-ell ........ NM
OMJ'at"*~ ,..,.. ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
GB w L Pct. GB Houston . ......... 5 1 .833
Ph St. Louis .......... 1 .800 Iii . 2~ Pittlbu:rgb ... -.... 3 2 .800• llf.i 2.lf.t San Frandsco .... 3 2 .600 11h 211.l Cb1cago .......... 2 2 .500 2 ~ Atlanta ........... 2 3 .400 2'1; 3 Loe Angeles . .. • .. 2 3 .400 2% 3 New York ......... 2 3 .400 2~i !'l'h Cincimat1 l 5 .250 3 4 Philadelphia ...... 1 5 .187 4 ,.......,.. ......
Hellllllfl t, .... Yt!ttlti~I
1. .. ,,....,, .. ~t
$t. L.e..tt .......... J '" hlll!Mtl Dflty .,,.. ~.
able to rtturo to Die Ii.neap;
(4) Two ezcellnt pitching
performances that went for naught
when the ~l offente was unable to
produce a scanty amount of l'UDS. The
first reveraal wu a 1--0 affair in New
York .a George Brunet Jost a 3-hitter.
'1be eecond WU a 3-0 tetbac.k at
Ba1timOre u Jim McGlothlin twirled a
2-hitter betore retiring in the seventh
for a pioch·hltter;
(S) McGlotbti.n tore the tiuue cover·
ing a forearm muscle and may mias
this week's tum in rotation.
( 6) The team 106l its hotel ac-
commodaUons in Baltimore when the
Army commandeered the •edifice dur-
ing city riotillg.
(7) Last Tuesday'~ OJ>ener was
poltponed becauae of the King funeral,
cauaing rescheduling of all travel
plans and a makeup date with the
Yankees later in the season.
(8) Riot menace in Washington
brought forth change of Monday's tilt
from nocturnal hours to dayUgbt,
causing further disruption of travel
and living anangemellts.
(9) Belief pitcher Bobby Locke suf·
fend a slight muscle pull in a thigh.
But he's appinntly okay DOW and
ready for duty.
Other th111 those nine things, end the
three shutout losses, it was an
unevenUul journey.
Now the Y mkees come to Orange
County.
And the bard·luck Angels can pick
up where they left off in '67 -es the
league's tougbe3t team in Its own
park.
CALlf'OltNIA WASMIMOTOlf ... ""' ···-~ lt.W. C1 l 0 I 0 U,,_, C1 4 1 I 2
,,_,, .. ' • 1 0 8-nl, rt ' ' 2 2
J.Han. rf • o 1 o e .. 1-in, lb • e 1 o
HlntGn. lb 4 0 l t F . ._rd, It 4 O 1 l
ltek:llerdt, II 4 t I o Stroud. If t o t t
SdtMI, lb ' t I t McMllll..,, • 4 I 2 1 ll._..,c 4 11 tHa-.u •110
ic,_, 211 4 t 2 0 lr'Ylft, c 4 O I t
151111. p 2 0 I I C09glna. lb > I 0 0
.l.Hamll'9(1, P •~• 0 O PllCUel. p ~ I 1 I
JollMtone, "" • • 0 0 llurllml4«, , 0 • 0 •
ltol ... P 0000
Totab XI t 7 0 Totela 34 1 It 1
ea1Hom1a . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ooo ooo oao -o
Wa1hlnelon . . . .. . . . . . .. 010 050 lOk -1
E -Hinton, Hens.... Of' -WNllmtrton 2.
LOI -c.tl!Grnla t, W1Jlll1111-. ._ 28 -He,,.....,
u,_, •-· F. ~rd. Knooo. 31 -r<nooo.
Hit -McMulllft (1), 8-s 111. S8 -lttPGL
II' " It •rt •• so 11111 IL.O.ll •213 7 6 6 1 I J. HamtltOl'I 1-113 0 O O 0 0
lurwrneter I t 1 1 o o
llofH 1 2 t 0 I 2 P•cuel (W,1·1) t 7 0 O ! t
Time -2:29, All~ -4,570,
'Longest Day'
For Lefebvre
Item of Past
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bc:;b Veale
was the cause of the most em·
banassing <Ill>' Jim Lefebvre bas
spent in the major leagues, but the
Los Angeles Dodger second baseman
has managed to gain revenge.
Lefebvre's "longest day" came u a
Dodger Sl4aU
Aorll I' Phlltdl-"111 VJ. Dad91n, 7:31 Kl'I !Mil
AMI 17 Dodgen et .... ~ ... 4:31 Kl'I t6'1t
AIH111• Dodllers et ,.._ Y-, tl:" l(fll ( .. )
Dodger rookie, three years ago, when
Pi-ttsburgti's Veale struck him out four
atr13.Lght times.
"He's the only pitcher who bu ever
done it to me, so I guess maybe I try
j~t a little barder when he's pit·
ching," Lefebvre said Monday night
after his two-run, ninth-inning homer
banded Veale and the Pirates a 3-2
aetback.
It was one of the toughest games
Veale will ever lose. He went into the
ninth inning with a one-hit, 2--0 victory
close iat band.
,mHUllGH LOS AMOUIS .. , ~"'
Wlllt, 3b 4 I I 0 W.Devll, C1
l>l .. y, ts l 0 0 0 Von.Ila. u
Clemen!t, rl l 0 0 0 Pal'lrtr, lb
srarweo. It • o o o L-"· 21> CltftCMfton, lb A l I I Colavllo, II
Mluirosltl, lb • o 1 O Falrlv. rf
M.AIOll, cf 3 0 0 0 Al<MllL 3b J.Mav, c • 0 2 I Haller, c
V81t, rt 4 I 1 t 'James. 911
Tor11orf. c
$1-.p
11.e.11ey, 1111
Totlls 33 2 4 1 Tolllla
.. ,,. ...
.. I I 0
' • • l • 0 ••
' l 1 2 l • l •
l • • •
J 0 0 0 ' . . . I t t 0 • 0 • 0 1 • • •
1 ' 1 0
" • 4 • Two Ollf -w1Ml"9 nm acored. Pl!1sburoh • • .. .. • . • .... 100 000 100 -2
Lol Allftles . . . .. . . .. .. -000 003 -) £ -L•f'lbvft, Alea,.L DP -L.GI Aneei.t l , LOI -l>llltbo>rth 7. Los ...,,.... ,_ 21 -aa1i.y.
Hit -LateOvn m. u -wi111. s -s1-. II' H It 'IElt II SO \/cat. (L,0.1) .. 2/l A J J I I
$11'1-(W,1-1) f 6 2 I l •
WP -v .......... -Hafltr. Tlme -2:ot. Al-
ll!ndaf1c'e -1"71'.
FOi 1t61 •••
-~ POUND FOR POUND
DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR THE
MOST LUXURIOUS SPORTS CAR
HHI m.IC1'10Nll
COLONY PAU
SlATION WA.ON
nus l!rOU\.O •• 1r
tAGallOM,,. •
AIOUMt tMI COMa •••
• • • IT'I min fO CMOOll
Ttfl cotn'MMAL Of
JOH"N"SON_ A _sON
~ .. -.· ·-.
OINf91 OOUHTY'S CM.llllT ll'rAIUIH9 UKoue • lllDCUIY •.CO-Al llALa -wasr CQlST HIGHWAY, NaWPOllT ••APt •m• '4M911
-Ct.OllD IU .. DAY-
.p
·btnc
naqbt
able to
IUI. The
in New
1-hlt:te:r.
ack at
rirled a
seventh
cover·
y misa
tel ac-
aen the
ce dur·
r was
unera.l. travel
itb the
lington
.y's tilt
ayUght.
travel
ke suf.
i thigh.
wand
and ttie
as an
Orang.
ID pick
Uthe
.s own
rote "'""" <I I I !
' , 2 ' 4 t I 0
4 t I I • • • •
" 1 J ' " 1 1 •
" • 1 • , ' 0 • ~ I I I
' 7 .. 1 o-o 1(-7
lll9lon t. -H-. -IC-. ll•PGL l& so
1 • • • • • . ,
2 t
•Veale t em-
·e bu
lilt the
111eman
ieua
ICl'l l.,_l
KFI ( .. ., , .. ,
"W'ben utfour
11 ever
e I try
:'a pit.
' Di&ht
homer
: a S-2
fames
nto the
victory
LU .. '""" 4 I I I
' • • 1
' 0 • • ' 1 , ! 3 0 1 •
3 t I I
l 0 • 0 , 0 • 0
I t I I D 0 0 I l • • •
1 1 I 0
' I ' I
0-2 ~-3 ._ ... '· -hlM)'. -· I SO
I t
J •
2:ot. Al-
-
IE :AR
r:
lt waa Jim Hardy's original intent to break into pro
sports through the football door.
But denied an American Football League franchise
for Anaheim, Hardy elbowed his way into ~asket.ball.
Actually. basketball appears to have ta.ken Hardy
by ~e elbow and -with all parties blusbil)g -lured
him m.
It came as no surprise here when lbe Amigos an-
nounced Har~ bad attached himself to the orgahiza·
lion. Everytime we attended an Amigo game there
was Hardy in r-0w seven behind the bench. '
6-ed Tim~• in R..., 7
An affable fellow. Hardy never failed to have a good
time at the Amigo games. It become clear as the sea-
son progressed that while the Amigos would never
threaten to break any attendance records, they could
always count on Hardy.
lmpr•ssed with this devotion, o w n e r , J im
Kirst end Dick N•I'°" tied • cen to th_.r M.inf pt1rt·
ner, Art Kim, •nd embr•ced Hardy.
Within • month or so, Hardy •nnounced the
An•helm Amigo' would forever afterw•rd be known
H th. L• Aft19les Stars. Accordingly, .he bu med
the AmllOI' st•tlonery, chucked the uniforms •nd
hMded for the los Aft19les Sports Aren•.
"We're still getting setUed ," he said the other day.
"We've got the old Los Angeles Blades offices In the
Sports Arena just opposite the peristyle end of the
coliseum. We're putting up some new partitions in
the office and working on some new Stars stationery.
"We're also waiting for the 1968-t9 ABA schedule
co come out of the league office. It's due any day."
Lotlfl Trip EJMl~tl
Hardy just returned from an extensive, twe>-week
scouting and recruiting tour of the United ·States. He
attendea a small colJege all·star game in Charlotte,
N.C .• the Olympic tr i a 1 s in Albuquerque, N.M., the
NCAA college division tournament in Evansville, Ind.,
the NIT-in-New York·. the--Httle-NMA-tournament-in
Lake Charles, La., and the NAIA in Kansas City.
Off th•t excursion, Herdy s•ys the thrM pl•y-
ers he'd most like to sign .,. guanfs Jo Jo White of
Ken1a1, Merv Jeckson from Uteh end Jerry New·
some of Indian• St•te. He elso converted with
Edgar Lecey, the M forw•rd who quit the UCLA
tum.
The ABA dra~ hH been rescheduled for the
first week In May at MinnNpolls.
"There's an awful lot of good basketball players
who can play professionally," Hardy said.
Lou of Talewt
"It's just like pro football -there's a lot of talent
for everybody.·'
As tor the Stars' coaching situation, Hardy debunk·
ed reports he wants Alex Hannum, currently employed
by the Philadelphia 76ers.
"I don't know where that story came from -I
have never even talked to Alex. I've talked to about
10 different people about the job, eight college coaches
and two pro coaches, and Alex isn't one of them."
* * * Huntington Beach High School tenrus coach Hank
Leichtfried says NeWJ>Ort Harbor's net team "could
slaughter 90 per cent o! the prer, teams in California
and beat a lot of college teams. '
He says Newport Is in an unbeatable situation.
"Most of those great players Newport has ha ve
come up through the tennis club program In the New-
port area and started playing as small boys.
"Newport 11 by fer the best high sdMol tennis
tMm In Callfornle. The only tMm1 cJote to them
•re S.nte Monica •nd Pelot Verd .. end they've
Maten them •lreacly."
3 Coa~t Gridders
• t •
Due Scholar· Honors
Three <>ranee co.at area
athletes will be honored at
the fifth annual National
Football Found.atioa and
Hau of f'Mne Scholar·
At!\lete A'ftl"ds Buquet.
The Los Angeles Chapter
wiU hoHt the affair Friday at
ttie Beverly Hllton Hotel in
Beverly Hills.
Over 800 followers are ex-
pected to be cm band to
oo.,or tfte 11 seleettd high
liCbool lcbola'·aVtletes.
Oll thal list are Greg
H&neen o l Wettmlnster.
Eric P.tton ol Meter Del
and Al Perlee of Huntington
Be~h.·
Hansen, a center and
linebacker under coach Bill
Boewell. was a second
team choice on the CIF
A.AAA footbal..l 1quad.
Pattori, a center and
Ferrell Sets Goals
Cross Wind Key
To Gold Medals
By RAY PLUTKO
Of Ille IMlll' "'"' SMlf
You can chalk up a pair
of gold medals for the Unit·
ed States in the upcoming
Olympic Games-that is un-
less there's a strong crou
•wind at race time.
In fact the prevailing ele~
ments may prove the lone
barrier to sprint whh Bar·
hara Ferrell, w h o says
she'll win the 100 and 200
meters come the fall spec·
t£cle in Mexico City.
That boast may raise a
few t¥•brows ..in soll\6-cor
ners, but if you've ever had
the occasion to converse
with the "Mighty Mlte" ol
the oval, you're no doubt by
now a member of her fan
club.
''I haven't even started to
build myself toward the
trials," said Miss Ferrell
after breezing to a 50-yard
win in last week's 200-yard
dash at the Orange County
Invitational.
"I'm just starting to let
myselC out. Actually, this
was just the fifth time I've
run outdoors thls year as
I've been competing indoon
-undefeated too," the petite
happy-go-lucky lass added.
Until a lltUe over two
years back, Ferrell was just
a passing name on the West
Coast and track and field
circles as well. However, over that span
of time the fot"mer Harri·
• son Tech prepater (Chl·
cago) has claimed a share
of the world record for JOO
meters (11.1) and appears
ooe of the two top hopefv.ls
among the U. S. women for
the '61 Ocympics. '
'Tm shooting for 11 flat
or better this summer and
I feel there are only three
others I'll have to contend
with," she added.
By the way. when Mias
Ferrell said three otbera,
she me~t just three others
a m o 11 g the top female
~rillter&-la.~ world.-"Wyomia Tyus is the only
ma.jor threat I have in the
United States," said F•·
rell. ''However, Irene Klrs·
zenstein of Poland and Ml&·
uellna Cobian of Cuba ~
two fine runners and we
should battle it out in Mex·
lco."
Ferrell says sbe's just
started to let beraell out
but the rep~sentative ;I
the Loi Angeles Mercur·
rettts is togging a few
hours of labor in the pro-
cess.
"I guess you could say
it's a long day as I attend
classes in the morning and
afternoon, t .h e n workout
uch evening from 5 to 7:30
at Dorsey High School."
Just the same, better watcll out for that cross
wlnd-Mbs Ferren-checks
in at a mere 5-foot-2 and 104 pound&.
Li·ke Old Times
DiMaggio Returns
I
Via Famous No. 5
llnebaclcm-at Mater 04ri,
WIS Oft the first teem ol tbe
CTF AAAA team two years
runnin1 aiAonc wittl a berth
on the All-America team.
He was coached by Bob
Woods.
And Al Perie. o( Hun·
Hngton Beach, .a third.team
CIF A.AAA selection at
guard, was named. Perlee
wag under the tulxlcaie ol Ken Moats.
EARNS HONOR
Erk Petton
OAILY ,.ILOT ,._.. W Lee ,. • .,.. The T•rs won the CIF ch•mpionshlps IHt yHr.
Lelchtfrled hH • good, YOUnt t••m but not In
Newport'• cl•n.
"I've got -.ne good freshmen and sophomores
but they 1t•rted playing here et Huntlnp.n Hlth
or In the eighth trade. Som• of Newport's kld1 were
playlnt when they were eight.
"It's real tough for them to catch up in a short
space of time.''
NEW YORK (AP) -Joe
DiMaggio's old No. 5 has
been retired for aJI time at
Yankee Stadium, a dlunk of
the Yankee C 1 i pp e r 's
plnstrlped uniform hangs in
a place G( honor with Babe
Ruth's No. 3 and Loo
Gehrig'• No. 4.
field where Sal Bando, the
A's young third baseman,
was fielding a ground ball.
"We have some good kids."
he said. ''Bando is going to
be a good one. The kid\ are
a little tense but they'll be
all right."
QUICK CHICK -When it comes to sheer speed
among the fair sex in the United States, they don't
come any quicker than Barbara Ferrell. She's cur-
rently the No. l hopeful for the U.S. in this ye.ar's
Olympic Games. Ferrell is seen here breaking the
tape In last weekend's Orange County Invitational,
winning the 220-yard dash in 24.6.
The Oilers' best players are Scott Lent, Turk, Keith
and Kent Orahood, Todd Lee, Mike Millner and Steve
Miller.
NY AC Records Still
RUied as 'Sacred'
But OtMagg>o was back in
action at the big Stadium
Monday eflternoon, wearing
the KeJly green and P'ort
Knox gold uniform of the
Oakland Athletics. He h ad
the white kangaroo shoes.
too, and the familiar No. 5
was on hJs back.
It wasn't exactly a lit day
for a homecoming for an old
hero. A Monday afternoon.
clouds hanging low and only
a few Cans (8,579) ln the
stands.
Kings Have Stars' Coach
On Verge of Quitting Job
NEW YORK (AP) -The
New York Athletic Club
cannot be compelled to open
ltt memberablp records to
the City Commission on
Human Rllbt.s. a Manhat·
tan Supreme Court justice
ruled today.
JUltlce Hy m an Korn
mllde the dedJion in a rul·
tni on the club'• move to
quaah • subpoena of Its
r • c or d 1 by the Human RJlhta Comml.a&IOft.
isdiction of the commission
"until legialators In their
wisdorn remove the exclu·
slon.''
Korn added that "it •p·
pears to be conceded that
there is a firmly held , pre·
vaillng public opinJon that
the petitioner discriminate•
a ( a I n s t 1ome minority
groups and that Its sponsor·
ship of the recent amateur
track meet. a major sport·
lng event. held at Madison
Square Garden, trig~ered a
mass demonstration."
Joe D. stood near the bat·
ting cage. lhald.ng hands
witll old friends and tallclng
about his new job a1 ex·
ecutive vice president and
coach for tht trantplanted
A's.
"The most heartwarming
thing that happened to me,"
DtMagaJo said. "wu tte
way all the old employees
come up to me and wilh me
luck. Sort of llk.e Oldtimers
Day all over aialn. It was
the same way In Baltimore.
too."
DiMaa looked out on th•
MINNEAPOLIS (AP ) -
"Next 96&IOl'\ will probably
be my last u ooach ol the
Mlmeeota North St.an,"
said Wren Blair Monday.
"By then I shall have
completed my job a ~
foreman ( coadl) and Will
r.eed to tum my attention
more to my group leader
(general manager) position
wlltl the club."
The tol>gh·speaklng but
fr~ly bocffy boas oC the
Area Calendar
Wednesday
Track -lAguna
Orange (3: 16).
Basebdl -Tutti n t.aiun• (3: 15).
Tennis
Laiuna C3:15).
Tustin
Golf• Estlncia
MalJ'loUa C2).
Swimming -I r v I n e
al League Pretinu at Corona
del Mur (3). Sonora at
al
a t L a g 11 n a , "1arlna at
Welt.minster. Newport at
al HunUngtoo tail at 3:1$).
Nor.th Sta.N looked tired.
Building a National Hockey
League team from scratch
to the Stanley Cup playoffs
in less tbao a year has taken
iu toll.
Wrinkles jut out all over
his face, his walk Is slower,
his energy noticeably sap-
ped.
"Yos, it's been a toosn
year, but very rew.ardiDC, ''
Blair $aid.
The North Stars are cur·
rently trailing Ule I. o s 1
Anceles Kirlgs t~ xames
bo two in U'leir best-of·1 West
Dlvts1on playoff. · The c.>mm5Jllon announc·
ed u la'91Uaatlon ot the club attw the NY AC track meet at M8dllOD Square
Giiden Ftb. 18 was boy·
cotted bJ Nesro atbtetes
and ptck.tect for lta 10eged
txcl_. tf Nep'on from
mem~.
Hey, Govern.or!-Out of the Way!
Kora Mid 111111 CGlltflU ... ...... _._ -------L.-~'
__:~_ .................. u .. L.:'.:J'•a.ieM1.1•-Y:mrlmutf1s. ... -1LA...t11U•~J1Mlleddoi00DllLColLJGu;.e«eG1:j&i;u•1...-.t1M1Mett111A!Ni=r1-l.iGo1011lf~1lut1111J•LCmDJHDe!!MDeDJl:._ tbc:;i:,.~i;...aiiua...;....... __ _
t:ferHa ... ~ to .. p1o, flt off tM plane Monday Sunday when Roberto Dt They 1fll"lll't.
flCJ"AWI .....,,Ill one .tap abead of !ob ViceMo t igned ..., incouect ir1 Cic:fn'( even know who
ftrTtd to examine Into and Goalby. But Mad6o~ is onty scorecard and blew M1 Ue he ,, .. , .. Goalby went on. !ftuaerb.~t!'~&.~ • IO"'«'DOI'· .c:t Goalby ta with Ooalby. "After~ Nlppened, we were
health d tn1mJ ble to MMtm cbampfotl. 9n the M.cklox wu coming to Sl lotrodueect aod dley toolr
Y • n ca ~watn UltettJftd tn Loail to attend _.coufereoct ~ Of \II ~ o~ ~ ~~bUc iDtertlt and the fO'YV111'". ol Democr•tJc Governors. o( the TV sports announcert
But he ~ tn bl1 four· GoalbJ waa relurnlnJ to "Ht IMlddol) Just tol off aakt be coald hardl1 wait to r-. dfdtlOll t b 1 t Ult hb BeUevUle. JU • home. the p!Jane ahead ol int." Jtl b.clr to hb IWttio and
, NYAC. as 1 private club. lull ~ the Mbs1Sslpp1 GoaJby said, ''and he was tell ev•f')'bodJ wtlo \be most
waa excluded ttom the Jur· IUver f.t11m St. Loul•. 1m1Jlng and w"'lng his popular ~ .,..._ ..
J 11
• l?llMn
-chock-!oe:..6111 vlcloey and
couJd look forward to all the
ftl~ benefit& that Co wMtl
the ..Muters cnampionshlp
Soif°t people t~Umate a golf
Pf"O can pick up •• mJUlon
for a victory In the Muten.
"I don't think lb! reelly
worth ttlal mud! money.''
the 38-yu r· t>ld ~olftr uid
•'IL m taht bt to a l\IY llk11
Arnold Palmer, bul 1 doul><
other 11~ Jn a.a~ caseJ
don't know wh•f'!' rn c~nna
to dO. l'fl 1'* have to weit
and see what bappam.
"l was elated w1U'I the
outcome of the Mr.ete:rs, ol
coort«. ~ rm '°""
about Wbat 'happened to
Robtrto." Goalby ~.
"But that' t rJal)y lei:Of\•
dary. 1 have tD look 11. lt
from my point o( view.
'
OILI R STANDOUT
Al Perlff
"llllT llACI. • l\l<lel\el, > vHr
.i.b. Clelmlf>t. l"vrM .-. Clell'll,,.
wlU 9'UI.
1("'9 JMwln (W -MY >I 111
Hwte C•ll (M VeMt ti IU
Tlflv'• Kl"' (J LOIMeri) Ill
S.tcv 1..W. (II O.~ .. I xlt1
Alllll Guy IM Vt *'-lel IU f l 2-19'9 IW H•,..,..tll IU
lllUI' ""-(A ,._ I) llf
..... 1. .. ..-"' G&tu) •'" l'leWltlftt (L "'nuv Jr> lot ,.111111< ,.,....,.1 Ill c ...... 11 11•
Te,...1..ia ID Htlll llf
\ll!Me LM 1J klltr>l llf
HCotlO llACI, 1141 mllt .. I w.r
.W. tM u.. Clelmlftt. l"vrM MOOt.
l• clelf!llM erla .,...,
l'lrtl Slrlh (M Vt leNwle) IU
1.-..IO II IJ L ...... tll IU
SHf'hll C.vt lltr (W Horrhl 112
C-it .. (Mltol 1J kllenl lit
Tn lV II (II c. ..... 11 IM
II L.ii. ID HtNMlll 111
~fl (H Jl-11 U7
Sllffi-r IW ~v) 1" "'*'"'(A,...,.., 11' I'm Hltll Ill O.rcltl xl01
llKtre KNI (M Y•ne•I Ill
THtllD llACI. I "1rlafte1. 1 vttr .._ -*" celh & "~'-· ,.urM ..... "•lftc• Tr-U S.lltr>l lit ltttlt llOl'•I (D Vela-11 lit f'lee H' lwttt IW HtNMlll Ill
lt19"1 Cr-ID "lt•c•l 111
GNell VlllOfl (L "IMtY Jr) I If
A·Woort lltmlllff (A "'""°) 111 ,.,!Me ,..,., (W Herrb) 111
''-"'"'9 OllMulM (M Vt lenlWll) lit lndllft ~ 11 v • ...._, 111
v .. 1....,. u A'""""'' "' L-y·s Seer .. IA MMM) Ill
Sllff IM V-J I) 111
POURTM llACI. 6 "1r .... a. > YHr
.w _._ celtt • "........ """" ...... l'~Nrt KIM IM Vt._I
,.,,.,.. ,...,,, (W .... "'•l
C_,IM 14 -)
119"11 l'IMI 111 C.,,,...I
l trMlll De1 IW -.1 ..._,_ID Htlll
no
110
llO
llt
llt
"'
LION STAR o,... H•nMf'I
.Hollypark
Entries
l!tmHI ,,....._ (J l.t mllert) 11'
!¥.... (J Sellttt) I 16
Akor (L Pln<IV J•1 11~
Shoemertl (W MtllorM'r) •114
llVINTH UCI. 6 turlol>ts. Fii·
11.. • tnertt • ..,.." o~ olld up.
Al-" PUrM USOO. l'-r "•!di II IL ,.lnuv Jrl 1U
"Klfk. c~ (W H•rrlal Ill a.11ys FUNN (A Plnedel 11'
Millwood II (J l.tmtlertl 11f
.._.,." .._,,.... IJ S.lltrsl 11•
SorMlledY ~I ID Htlll 111
Sl11.-. lM Ytnell 111 S. Wtt (W ~) lU
L•-• ltovt ll IJ Trullllo) '"
lleHTH RI.Cl. I 1/1' mll11 Ofl I~ lurl. Fiii!« I. mor.s • wort okl ond
u~. Cleult._. t llow-PurM Sii.too. TM Hiib h lltt ,..,,.,
Mn. Joe ,_ ID Htlll 1t0 ""* , ...... IJ S.llff>) 110 SUfltd (M V•lenlUflt l 117 GIMv Outen Ill ID Pl1rt1I IU
Sal ....... (4 ,.,.,.., t!O
S-. II Vt leMlel• I 110
'lodu tL 1'""0' ..l•L . 114
NIHTH RI.Cl. • lurllflal. 4 vu r
otm tl'ld ue. Cltllnln111. "'1rt1 "500.
l • Cl•lm"'9 •rlet &1'11CO. lrlsh '•ltndlhlf IM VtleNUtle) 11'
•·Sitt AsMI IW Htrrlt l IU
Ille V-lJ LAmlletll 114
l.ud<Y land IA "'nedtl 117 1 .. u lreve IM Y-1) 117
Cuwr CIA IJ Trullllol 111 "'°'•le One II Vt llntuelol 111 Ltvtl Flow IL Plncn Jrl 111
Tor·Chl·Beno IW Htrmtltl IU
llror>d Rcwol (D Hall! 111
Mr. "''" IF Cl>llt l no Murott i.11 (J Ptttvl II•
AIM 11111•••
llaval •u• (It Blt!'<O) 111
A·lltnlK CW HtrrlU 11%
A-4.. Gleuburt .... , ........ N .
PRO BOXING
LOOP FORMS
Ptel'I K"'9111 II Vt ........ lel Ht..,.11 K~ (A ,.IMM 11 lrvcle ..., (0 ,..._,
~~ CHICAGO (AP ) -The
"' forrnation of • professional ~: boxing league with fnn·
,,. chises in eight cities was an·
no nounced by Jack Drees,
ue sports commentator.
.. ...., .... , IL ,.llo., Jr I)
c-11~1
·-,~IM Y-tl AIM ......
IN. Que1ty IL ""'°" Jr ti l'IM T_,... IW Httmtltl
CtH'-le ..., IJ S.lltnl I'-Toa IA ,. ..... JI :: The cities and t e a m
ownerships include: Pll'TH llACI. 1 1116 "'llta. l YHt ............ __ ,.,,, .. ~. Ohicago, Joseph KeUman
,,. and Drees; Los Angeles,
:: Loyd C. Sigmon and Clair L.
:~ Stout : San .F r • n c I g c o •
110 WiJli~m D. Shaw ; Boston,
:~ Curt Gowdy and James
'" Fuller.
llnu,_I (A ""'""l Holl To Iott (J Lom ... tll
Al llMUI (I Vtlefttutlel
"•1011 II CtlllNI) ,...... 10 "krc. I)
Vt rwt' IL ,.lntn Jrl
Gro ,._, tw Ht rrlll "•-•kilo (M Y-11 l'IMtl,.. Tlloutlll ( J SMltr>I
Wtr ..... (W He""911l .,,,. Meitl Ill I i.tit•>
Tttrllllt T.,. IW MIMIMYI
Alie .......
Conr..,. Kl4 10 ,.,._ti
::; Louisville. William H .
120 King ; Pittsburgh. Robert
114 Prince and Art Rooney:
SIXTM lt.t.CI. I I/If 11111111. f .,.., --.... A~.,...,....,..
Baltimore, L. W e s t o n
Gregory: 8nd Washlngton,
D. C., HaZTy G. Sella and W.
Ernst Minor m.
"-Tl9tr IA 'IMNI 111
II 0-.rrtl IM Yt,..1) 11•
l trtll """"'1r ID ,.ltrttl IJI
OISTI IESA
PUIUC GOLF & COUNTRY CLUI
OPEN HOUSE
SUN., A'RIL 21 , 3 TO 6 P .M.
FREE PARKIN~
l11vlte Y•11r ,.,.,lly To
J•ln The W..wlorf11I
WerW Of O.lf
1701 GOLF COURSE DR.
(114) 640-7200
FREE DRAWING FOR
ADULTS ONLY
1 Sot lMI W.Mt
1 s.t 1MI ,,., ..
20o.tf P .....
20 lunch•I'•
A lu..ilnv"' S herft
POA Pfrtt ... ht
""' '"9ht 10 llect. Cert, .....
lllt l'fft 1 111 l>a,.,...,., ,..,,.., •1111111 l'Mlll .,.. ,,.w1y
411•1 ........ , ......... , •11• .... tt•ff w-·• °"' ... ._...._ ..... 10-HO ..._.,.,..
._,.., ti.~ ltl,_.,, .... 10.-IOI ..... .,,,
II.,.. ..... ,._, IMll 11111 ..... _. ~.
.... Cllottc .. ....... • ... ftde4 .., ·-i.
1441, f ... ....._, ti. k yw, ~ M.._.f, Mlllt ~.
...... wn-. lltTflA AODID ATTllACTION, ... ,.,., ltll"t'l
1W .. H CIHtll ·-" wlft •u• 111 t lltltltl ........ FRIE , ........... ,_._ ......
FIEE ................... .
~--•11,u.urcw CMNCC ..... CUii I I
CMMCC WOMIN'S CUit I I
• <r' -". . -... -.. .. . . . ._ . . . . . . . .. ... ...-..... ,. -.. ~ ········ .......... ... . _.._._
J % DAil Y PILOT Tue5daJ, Aptil 16, 1%8
Free·for•all Prlmarv
Johnson, Reagan Haunt Oregon Politics
PORTLAND. Ore. (UPl)
-The political ghost of
President Johnson and lbe
flickering t.elemion image
behalf of the Calllornia cov-
ernor despite his contioued
refusal to become an active
candidate.
slnce Johnson announced
that he would not run. But
the group bu not disban:ied.
of Ronald Reagan are baun· USING FILM
ting the campaign6 of three
4:>Ctive candidates in Ore·
goo's presidential primary.
Even before JOOnson's de·
ci.sion not to run, Kt>,nnedy
wu fav<)l'ed to win the Dem·
ocntic primary. His ch.ane-
es probably were enhanced.
by the President's announce·
ment.
Gov. Tom McCall, a
Republican and an astute
politicsd ob8erver. sfid in an
interview be tbillks Kennedy
will win. He empba.aized
that the iovernor baa little
diction, DO\ an endorsmeot.
Despite tu., announcement
that he., would neither ~k
nor accept nomination for
another term, JobnS<>n's
name will appear on the
Democratic ballot May 28
against Sens. Robert F.
Kennedy and Eugene Mc·
Carthy.
Reagan, the Callfornla
governor who insists be is
not running for higher of·
flee. is entered in the Re-
publican primary against
former Vice President Rich·
ard M. Nixon.
CUT PRESTIGE
It is unlikely th<A Johnson
The group. headed by
Portland savings and loan
executive Robert Haze, ls
using a 30-mlnute Ulm on
~agan's public life as a
stand-in for the non-candi-
date. The mm has been
shown on a statewide tele·
vision network and is being
screened at "Meet the Can-
didate" ga~herings.
In addition, shorter tele-
~ion "spot" commercials
are being used to boost the
former actor.
The "Cjt:lzens for Johnson-
Humpbrey" organization,
created to support the Presi·
dent. bas become inactive
STILL OPTIMISTIC
But McCarthy's st2Ce or-
ganization, which was est.ab·
lis'hed long before Kennedy
entered the race. is still op-
timistic.
"We haven't lost anyone
to the Kennedy ·camp that
we know of,'' said McCar·
thy's state coordinator,
Gene Hogan o f Eug~.
"Our biggest organizing job
is finding things for all of our
volt.mteers to do."
"Kenned)' ia a very crafty
politician and he has a lot of
money," McCall sald. ''I
just hwe the feeling that
when the Kennedys get
moving. -they are bard to
stop." •
Nixon is the odd.s-011
favorite to w i n t h e
Republican primary. Even
Reagan's backers concede
tbeat tbe governor has Httle
chance of winning aa Joq as
he refu.se.s to become an ac-
tive candidate. Haze said
he could consider a.D)'Wng
oveT 11 percent of tbe vote
to be a vktory.
or Reagan could win without
campaigning aotively but a
good sbowing by either non-•
candidate could cut into the
prestige of the winner.
With only 18 ~publican
and 35 Democratic national
convention delegate votes z4
stake, prestige is the bigg~t
prize in the West's most
wild and woolly primary.
Oregon law places on the
ballot the names of all "na-
tiona»y recogni7.ed" presi·
dential candidates. An indi-
viduzil can withdraw from
the race only by swearing
he will not run for the presi·
dency. ~ag_an reft!s_ed ~
take the oath and Johnson
announced be would not run
after ttie deadline for with·
drawal.
An active "Reagm-for·
President" organization is
conducting a campaign on
Breath-test
Law Cuts
Accidents
LONDON (AP) -Brl·
tain's breath.test law. six
months old, has reduced
highway death.a and wroug\\t
a dramatic change in ttle
nation's social life.
Country pubs -once ttie
mecca for motaistS who
liked to drive out oi town for
a few pints oi beer -report
bar sales <if. Some rural
publicaDs 53.'Y 1be drop in
drive-in trade is &$ hidl aa
80 percent. City bara are
less affected.
Eveo the trewers camot
deny that the stiff legisla-
tion, enabliDg police ~car
ry out spot roadMde breath
tes~. has had a telllng ef-
fect on bigtrway cuoalties.
The Miui*Y of Tral'lfJP<)rt
reported 1hat road dea1hs
were down by 579, «' 23 per·
cent, for the ttiree ~
alter the new law came in
last October.
Death! in D e c e m b e r ,
usually a bad month. were
down 33 percent -6M com·
pared wittl 980 ~ prevl<>Ui
year.
''There is no doubt about
the effect of the new retU}a-
tions,'' sa,ys a Transport
Ministry spokesman.
The Royal Society fOr
Prevention of A~
comments: "The new
reguiations have bad a st>eC·
tacular effect in cutting
deatjis by 23 percent and seri~ injuries by 18 p«·
cent in their first three
months.
"Now we an worried by
an upwaro trend in child
pedestrian casualties -up
3.4 percent last year. This
underlines the need for eo
urgent training program
and we sbaD start • new
campaign in May."
A London taxl f i r m
reported a 25 pereem in·
crease in its buain6ss after
the pubs close at 11 p.m.
Some Britiltl couples wbo
visk puba regularly take
turne driving -11\e hWlbend
has ju.st ooe drink and
drives one nigbt., Ile wife
takes l:t easy and drtves the
next.
"rve giVftl up my car and
now uu cabs « hi.re cars
when J go drinUlc.,. Sllid
b&wi"IPMD Frarlk Furner.
Hire can are cbauffeured a'*>moblles rented on an
hourly basis.
M-Rritlftl whn N!VRr
.. ~4b*-..beu""*" JD liquor t\Oft• llKi .........
-'1 wed to loYt to take 1*le .........,__.,_ __ __..,.. .jor a ti* tD I COdn• !
try ,., but r am an elsht·
;plllt ma and k'I tot I bit rilllJ," ..... Jfm Brown. ·~1111 ··~............. out of ..........
lly..;a -tat Of .:P11Mtn1-;1.-=-ra
-the-Mobft-£conomy-:Run. --
But all over the country MfY day, dr1wn find hrn9IMI
on economy runs they didn't plan for.
That's when It pays to know what our drivers knOw. Because
tiasfcally the Mot>rf 'Economy Run Is ell about hOw to make a
little gas go a Ion& way. Even If It's only to the next os station.
The trick Is to treat your accelerator very pnuy. The men
llnSltlve your foott the better your aas mlleap •
t<eep speed chaoses smooth ~ pacfna ~ With ""
\
Reagan b~ said repeated·
ly that he will ~ u~gn
.actively in Oregon or
elsewhere. He bas dlsvow·
ed Haze's organization.
But at a recent news con·
Cereoce in Snc.ramento,
Reagan declined to urge
Oregonians not to ~ for
him.
Democratic nalioool co~
mitteeman Norman Stole, a
supporter of the Presidents,
said many ~mbers of the
"Citizens fur J o b n s o n -
H u m p b r e y ' ' organ.iza.
tion now would like to sup-
port Vice President Herbert
H. Humphrey for tbe presi·
dency.
"I am ~ry much a Hum·
phrey enttu.tsiast myself"
said Stole, a Porttand busi-
nessman.
But he said it would be
"vwy tricky" to urge a v*
Cor Jobmon to sbow support
for Humphrey. It is
mecbankally very difficult
to write in a c.andidr.A.e in
Oregon.
"Humphnly bas tremen-
dous al:relM.h here I n
Oregon," Stole said. "It is a
shame he isn't in a po60tion
to capitalize on it in the
primary.
State S e n . Edward
Fadeky. Democr<rtic state
chairman. does not believe
Humphrey c a n inherU ·
Johnson's support, eitMr in
Oregon or in the rest of the
natioo.
"I don't think tbe Pres·
ident's mantle can be sbi.fit.
ed to any individual intact
Fadeley said. ''Someone
may end up with the pock·
ets and some one • with
the coUar.''
A A
•
~ ......... .---r
Natio nal Week .Booked for Libraries
Branches Plan
Tons of FUn
The wonderful world of book5 wilf be
opened further when Newport Beach Library
introduces a book service station at the
Bluffs beginning April 25. Opening the door
lo lbe new facility is Jimmy Palmer (above)
while Mrs. Alice Wellman Harris. children's
author, bolds an arm load of books. On band
for assistance is Mark Palmer and Mrs. James
E. Palmer, who will act as a hostess during
the 2·p.m. affair. Welcoming two high school
students who will serve as librarians for a
day are (at right, left to right) Mrs. Thomas
Jesko, Mesa Verde branch librarian and Mrs.
Raymond Pearce, Cenur Street librarian.
Among 10 students selected to participate ln
the libraries observance ol National Library
Week, April 21-27 are O~t to right) Carol
Best, sophomore at Costa Mesa High School
and Cindy Hoyt, junior at Estancia High.
During the week the -Libraries and their
Friend5 will stage coffee hours. speciar speak·
ers and exhibits for adults and children -
thus opening another chapter in their service
to the public.
In beplnt w1th NaUoo.al Ubn.ry Week, April 21·27 has been set aside
by Newocn Beach. Oosta Mesa and Mesa Verde Ubraries to introduce area
realdents and childnn to the marvek>us world of books.
Multttleeteci prognuna are booked by llbnrian& an<t Friend& to en·
couraie the public to vlalt their area branch.
Center Street Library In C'.<>lta Mesa, a bnncb of the Orange County Ll· b~ will host an open house all week with the staf!f conducting tours and
lel"Ylllg refreshments.
Beginning at 9 p.m. Tuesday, Apr1l 23, five tbldents from Estancia
Hlth School will serve as Ubrariana for a day. The following Thursdav at
9 a.m. a apecial "1ry hour featuring movies, 10ngs and games will be ofler·
ed to the children.
STUDENT LIBRARIANS
Mesa Verde branch abo will welcome five student librarians from Coeta
Mesa High School next Tuesday, and will honor them at a luncheon. Tbe nm day Mrs. Dorothy Wenck, home advisor for University of California,
Ai:riculture Extenalon Service. will discus• Family Communications at
9:30a.m.
A cofiee hour will be hoeted bv Costa Mesa Friends of tbe Llbr3!'V.
TbW"9day, Aoril 25. bellinninf at 9:30 a.m. Costa Mesa Golf and Coun·
try Club will be the settini when the FTiendB gather for a program starring
columnist Jack Smith of the Los Angeles Times .
During this installation meeting a business session and brunch is scbed·
uled. Tictets are ,2.75 and may be reserved at Costa Mesa or Mesa Verde
branches.
SPECIAL EXHIBITS
Special exhibits at Center Street are dolls with an international flavor
donated bv Miss Cherie BollinJt of Costa Mesa. and old treasured books
loaned bv Charles Priest. L. W. Loomis and Miss Gav Conforti.
On displav in Mesa Verde is an art exhibit an-an2ed bv Costa Mesa Art
Lea~e featurintr the portraits of Shirley Millitran. Eli7.abeth Ashcroft of
Costa Mesa offers her collection of familv crests and Mrs. Paul Frieberts-
hauser of Costa Mesa is presenting her colorful papier mache collection
of story book figures.
NEWPORT ACTIV ITIES
Newport library is opening a book station at the Bluffs, 2112 Felipe,
on April 25, at 2 p.m. to serve children in the lower grades. The Friends
wiD serve as boste.S6es.
Alice Wellman Harris, area author and speaker, will offer a talk on I
the various facets of children's reading.
j Following the openlng, the Bluffs room will be available each Thurs·
dav-afternoon for book browslntr and selectibn: • --
Preempting National Library Week Rex Brandt of Coron.a del Mar will
be. the speaker at the Friends meeting Friday, April 19, in Mariners Li· bracy, NewporL
During the coffee the nationally·koown artist will speak on area boat
yards as seen through the eyes of different ages and times.
~. Altrt 1 .. tHI MWM ,, .. IJ
BEA ANDIRSON, Editor
Two-time Loser Looks for Lifetime Sentence of Happiness
I used to tlhtnJc you were on tbe aide now we live about eoo milet away
of us ldds, but now I think you sea from ouc ~.lies. My mother lcnowt I
crabby old lady-FORMER FRIEND am pregnant but abe has no Idea bow
DEAR FORMERi I ... M MritnJ1 pregnant I am. ANN LANDERS ~ &bt the boy It tn duaer ., heeadai Tbe beby it due ln about two w"u
ettlttr • fttl& .......... put ..... and I am u.ndec.lded M to whether I
pa.,er. Ttt1t, IM•ever, 11 ......_ th lhould notify our pwenta wbtli the
hired blm. He la handsome. hard· DEAR ANN LANDERS: Jam a 13-point. W111t I W fa .... wa baby arrwee or wa.lt a few months.
worting and I thlnJt we~ ln love. He VAAr..rutl hnv whn thlrtlre v"'"' Al!vi,.. dl1clpUne. Unftrtnll~IJ, _ ... _m-, What Is your acMceT -IN· very grown-up a"'itind'r-l-lOOb'-T:"---r=-=..;;;:.=.;...-::.:.;:.....;;::..=.-===;.....p.:-=--=-~--~ilii~-.-~ar•••~1"1J1,,._WN--~w.-.i•.-....,-.~.~us---,a--~~M:~&~ITnl~CiiU"~:~.T"'~un:u-G
I IOC01Cllt-awr:M:liT The Anny won aUnks ~ did-fO'L tell tbat U..ye.u-tuy, euavt:idliK w iiltMlll ..._,._. -QEAft IN• lftCtf) ymr ..,em
take him because he bas a. sled plate old kid be ls betta otf staying In the t1das ptuo Ii Ml ....a,• tM lllt. wtae. ..... ., ...me.. It la arealltde
in bead. He want& to flWT')' me. What house pncticlnf the piiriO, wbldl be Gt4 It ttrallllf ltW, • ...,, , ~ le alat ,_ eu bep u nal" Db
do you thlntT-ANGIE. hates, than being out In the fresh aJr '1 Ud• • ..ad. U 1" a~m~ to '9p eff
DEAR ANGIE: ne kid .... a alffl liaY1DI ball wtth tbe pna? Any doctor DEAR ANN LANDERS: M1 bul-rift ..... from tla: .,..,, • lfe •Ma
pla&e 11 Illa llea4. W111t'1 YOUR ex· wUl tell you that foo-<aA ""°"'· A1ao band and r wen married at a am1U Y•• take aiha Mate, •r •lie• 10meoae
cue' ftiiJKfd'1 cliancts on>ecomJng a greit ramlly wedding. r tnew T wu Jnl· a-te Yldl;"J.w Wiil mde a ftol or
A fellow It 1lto4tl4f be lookbt« for a ball pb,yer are a lot better than h1J nant at the time, end f\iured f WU Yttll'MV.
tJrl 17. If you are 1mart yoa'll ~Ip chances of becomina • creat pllDO about three montN aJonc. Al it turned
him Oad one. Wlaere '1 1111 motlter, player because be aa1d ln b1a letter be out, I Wit m m1 ftftb month. Wt left OONFIDENTIAL TO NEED TO
aayway1 lovu batebe.ll .ud U.. the piano. the dty shortly att.-the ftddlna and F1ND 'nlE RJGtn' WORDS: You've
. ... .. -.... . .... . ._ ,., .... ,.._.... ..... ...... -------------------
found the right wcrda, but you're ten.
lng tbem to the wrong perwon. Your
daught« ls a spoiled. 1elfisb gtmmee.
pig and an accomplished moocher -
the n!SUlt of 24 J'Mrt Of practSce. Tell
her she may pe1 mr °"2'l bllla and IOlve her awn prablems.
What •waits yoa 011 tbe otlter aide
•i me :nwrillae wea t now nryoa-
nre '"* maratap wilt wo1k1 Red AH Landen' liiooklet "Maniace -
Wlit .. ~xped. ri SeH ,.... reqlletl to
A .. Loden ta tare •f WI 11ewspaper
ead..ta1 st eeim IA coll 111C1 • leoi,
ttampecl. te1f4dclft~ eavelope.
AH jla. ~ \elp 1°"
wt&ll yoar probleau. 8nd tlaem t.o Kr
ID cart el Ute DAILY Plthr, aeJot.
e.1 a eelf4Mre•ed. aamped ••
•eltpe.
DAJLV PILOT
Mrs. La nsdell lor President
Woman's Club Names
New List of Officers
Mrt. J. W. UuuldeU \.M
been named to eene u
prea.ldent of UM Laeuna
Be.ob Womaa•a CJ!j) foUow-
lni Ill 1nltallMioo eeremGD1
in J1me.
Alsilti'nt her will be tbe
Mmet. Rutb Hull and Eqar
Axtell, first and MCODd vb
presidents, Georlia Arner,
treuurer and Normlll S. S.
A l exander . fiDIDdal
Mcretary. ,
Otbera elected· to serve
art Mill Lot. Howery and
Ml11 Helen Unaer ,
r e c o r d l n I aod <"Ot·
respoodint MCretmiea;
Mits Laura Manetta, de•
Of dlairmen; Mn. lUcbard
H. Olloo, bout d:trecior;
Mrs. Wllllam Henry, ren·
tall; Mr1. Cliff«d E •
Westminster Woman
Pilots Mothers' Club
Tipping the Scales
Discussion centerd around tipping the scales in favor of the '2 million South
Coast Community Hospital's expansion carnpBJ.·gn when workers gathered f~r
coffee in the Three Arch S.y home of Mrs. Harold Kman. Actual fund-rais-
ing is scheduled to begtn Thursday, April 18. Members of ~e general gi!ts or-
ganization are (left to right) the Mmes. Robert F. Redw1tz, Geoffrey Man-
sell, Arn K. Youngman, Harold Lynch Jr. and Thomas L. Cutkomp.
Horoscope
Gemini:
WEDNESDAY,
APRIL 17
By SYDNEY OMARR
Be Versa ti le
u . Col. Jolumy C •
Chestnut will be aunt of
honor at tiae inltallatiOD of
Flight 19, U.S. Air Force
Mothers neJt Tuesday.
Mrs. Melvin Roenfeldt of
Wettmimter will becom•
the oew prealdeot of Ill
organlz.atioa at the 7:30 p.m.
meeting 1n HJde Park Mo-
bile Home btatet Club-
bouae in Santa Ana.
Pilotint tbe club thrwtb
the year allO will be U.
Mmes. Elmer ll'riU, ant
vice pretident; Step II. t D
Lara, MCODd vioe prelidlllt;
Matt Dceda, third vice preai·
dent; Em m et t Spmd)tr,
secretary; Charles Tucker,
tr~er, and LeRoy Ram·
JDOCk.-1ergeant.at auu.---
Guest speaker wUl be
Mn. Ray Remillard, na·
tiooa.l president « tbe non·
profit, california organi.u-
_pusm1NT_
Mrs. Reenhtcft
tion. Mn. Spindler ls ln
charge of arranaemea
"The wise man oontrols
h.is destiny . . • Astrology
points the way."
ARJES (March :ll·April
19): Emphw on bustnesa
a ff a l r s , duties &;ad
responsibllitlet. T a k e lD·
itiatlve in ~ acrou
unique program. 0 t b er 1
observe and depend upon
you. Don't let 1hem do1m.
GEMINI (May 21-June·
20): Be versatile. Help ~e
who ar-e willing to aid
themselves. Key is coopera-
tion. Obtain hUrt f r o m
TAURUS metSage. Some
have their eye on your
money. Know this -play
cards clo!e to ctie9t.
CANCER (June 21-J uly
22): Tact wins the day. Ap·
ptie9 MPeciaJly ln dealing
with public in ,general, with
~. panoer in particular.
Be a Shrewd observer . Don't
attempt to force issue~.
(])eek legal aspects.
SAG1Tr AJUUS !Nov. -22-
Dec. 21): Fini~h what you
start. Some who try to talk
you into delay are only after
your cub. Know this -act
accordingly. Pay for what
you receive. Buy what can
be afforded.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jaa. 19): Set example. Say
nothing in anger. Many
regard you as example.
Gamma Phis Planning
Boat Ride to Luncheon
TAURUS (April 7.0-Mlay
20): Some cloee to mate or
partner may be under flmn-
cial pressure. Don't be
drawn into --1elt con-
troversy. Be dfplomldc, bat
hold on to rlgbllt. lA:I&·
range view is beet today.
MARTHA GOODYIAR
To Marry
Betrothal
Revealed
At Party
Owing a party Ellter
Sunday ln their OotQa M ...
home, Mr. a Mn. Mn v. Good)'eat" announced h
engagemtot of t b e l t
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Dilcunion ~ member of
oppotite sex could result in
improved work condkiont.
It is a nl9tter of COin·
manlcatioo. One who ap.
pared to oppose you simply
I a c k e d \Dlderstanding.
Pl'O'ride tt.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) :
Accent OD relations with
YOUllC ptnOlll, loved ones.
Tactf'lll baodting of delicate
lituation pays dividend!.
A w6d jelloaa ICCUN!tiou.
If yoa mafnMln HDH of
fa t nee, you wtn.
LIBRA (Sept. »-Oct. 22):
~ ... led where of-
Aot, bame relatiool are con-
cemed. l11111CU, calla de·
mlDd e4ltlladan. A void tell·
deoep4ion. Be pracU.cal.
Don't fall victim to false
~10 (Od. 23-Nov.
21): Some gin you tips, allelflCl tbortcutl. Key is to
be realllttc. Don't neglect
experience. LellOGI y 0 u
lelrDed In p..t proyt in-
Yalueble. ComliDlltlon of darine, W tatilm l I
tlcbt.
Take care with appearance, G
statements. You asked for Balboa Harbor am.ma
opportunity -today you Phl Bet.a Alumnae Chapter
receive it. Live up to best in is featuring an ln5tallation
younelf. Thunday, A..-U 18, in the
AQUARIUS (Jan. ro.Feb. home of Mn. Ch a r 1e1
18): Listen to inner voice. Melchior o f Huntington
Shut out confusing, outside Harbour.
influences. Privacy is im· AJ. this time ~ chapter
portant. Today you gain if will present a '250 check to
you get w kn-Ow yourself. the American Field Service.
Later, be with people who Members will cruhe «> tilelr
share interests, beliefs. . luncheon in the Huntington
PISCES (Feb. lS.Marcb Harbour Beach Club.
20): Give attention to am-
bitions. desires of friends.
How you spend your spare
time deserves special con·
sideratioo. You can make
llie more pl~ I f
Representatives
Attend Confab
~Dahle. 'Iblnk. d
IF TODAY 1s Youn At Disneylan BIRTHDAY you are a
natural executive. You are
ready tO undertake new pro-
ject. Take initiative. Be con-
fident -stre11 orlllnallty
and independence.
G EN E R A L T E N·
DENCIU: Cycle high for
CAPRICORN, AQUARIUS.
Special word to CANCER:
indMdual who 91)eeia1iles in
legal atfan can aid your cau.e.
"~~~"'°lF'T~~ ~:=.'Thv~1.t,,.
BG
•
d augbter. Martha Ellzabe4tl f
g:z:.ar s !>n RJO~ r ~: For the irst time, Donald WUson and John .. Beauty 11 More than Skin Deep
Downie of Pbiladelphi•. f ·1ne European Art one glance te11s you th ... fathton•bt• ""# MIS! Goodyear attended Omega watc,,_ are bMutfful. But, beneath schools In Olean, N. Y., is a tul f ....... _._,..._h rt f graduate of EstaocJ.a Higb that beautf ace.,... ,,. ea o "
School where ebe was I De• comes to the ' true thoroughbttd.
tional merit ftDaJlJt, and To be.,,., "--a coet1 a fttt1e more than now ii a student at tbe ""-V Univ~ ol Cautoma, San h ordinary watcMI. But. when you own one you'll Di~:·~ ii a lfadtuM Newport Beac area. know,lti9no ordlnarywatch.All ln1•kgold
of 01Dt7 mp S c b o o l, , wtth IMtchlng bracelets.
J>b1i...._..., at t • n d • d Round Omega featuNa fwt-edged Sapphette
. 9 e a a t 7 l y I a l a Stlite or;.., IM9h bf'acefet. $295. Uni-*1 at now II terV·
tog wKli 41ae Mlr18tl in Vilt· Oval ttyte. Sapphette cryltal I• Jtnperviou1 to
IF YOU ARE A NEWCOMER ·ro TOWN
OR KNOW ONE TO WHQM \'OU WISH
TO DO A GOOD TURN • · • ·
PHONI THIS WOHOUFUL 'COMMUNITY
SUVICf AND A HOSTE.s.S WIU. CALL
wnH 61FTS AND INf<>lMATION.
ii
We Welcorn• You
. To Th
ORAN6E COAST AREA
PHONI 144-6nl
FRIGIDAIRE
TWIN 30 FlAIHI
LOOK!Ovensaboveand below
in compact 30" width !
It updat .. your kitchen the minute you slide it into place.
New stamour, ntw cooklnt spae._2 1p1ciou1 ovens in •
"",. Just 30-lnchn wide.
• fadla ... Pull 'H Clean (lower) oven slides out like a
drawer 1CMI cl•n It •lily while atandln1 up.
• u,,., .,. dotr llW. up, .. ,Uy cltarinc tall pots on
the Cooklnc top below.
• Ctelt M1111 ~(lower OYtn) mrts/eooks/stopl
-ell IUtarnltlcally It the times you select.
e H•••·Mlltdw 111rfec• •nit, tlle Ht•metic .. ,..... wetcher"
p •nil• -.•itist 1cwchin9 1114 t..11 • .,,.,,,
ISAl 0 HN
N l .. DAlll IUCTll.cuAN
OftM IA ....... ATA
IOCI IOTTOM PllCll
• "" lllel ""'e!M f/lf 11.ited«I ..
ll e 'Mlillt-•Y ""-ol •""-
• ,...,. -r.ck. Md dl't. 110W11
-• '"' ...._ ---Vl!lh -unllmlMd ""' Mfflnle 11'.w
$251
DEPEND ON
na.m. tcUffl and ecniechel. $286. u:~•beeo eetfar!!__JL-~~:=...--~~~~~~~--.~=.-~~....o....-.:..~~------''---+---l~~~~-~-iiij~·~~-r;n~4~•~·-~..._.,.:;-~•-R-~·--'~~·~··~··~·-~~tt~~i);mt'Y:!11Jrf1:~(91~~~(jllf1EQ~ririr-=
-=iwftitillgn;1tlNC~
' ,,
3336 Via Lido -Newport Beach
Phone: 67'J..27Zl.
ti FASHION ISUfe)
HlW'OltT HACH
644-fJff
411 East 17tli Street
COSTA MESA
• •
DAILY M -SATllMT M
-fntetrity etMI AeJt.~m+y Sh1ce 1947-
Queen for a Tea
Each new member will be a Queen for the Day when Mesa-Harbor Women's
Club stages its annual Membership Champagne Tea in the Dover Shores home
of Mrs. William C. Holmes Friday, April 26. Ready for royal treatment is
Mrs. Frank Marshall who is crowned by Mrs. Holmes (left) and Mrs. Stanley
Hickin. -
El .Camino Real Activities
Women· Open Kitchens
While Its sections are busy
with many activities, El
Camino Real W o m an ' s
f'lub's next major function
;s a Kitchen Bouquet Home
~lour and Card Party to take
place Friday. April 26.
Travelers will gather at 9
a.m. on· their first stop, for
roHee. in the Capistrano
Beach home of N...rs. Robert
Warner.
Their next destination will
he the Dana Point home of
Mrs. Leo McGtthee. Mrs.
R. R. Alexander will hostess
the luncheon in her Dana
Point residence.
Pollowing ttie to u r ,
travelers will gather for 3
card party in the Dana
August Wedding
Po i nt Co mmunit y
Clubhouse. Mrs. D o n a I d
Moore will host.
Tour tickets are $2.25 and
card tickets are $1.25. Mem-
bers may invite friends
and neighbors to the event
and may obtain reservations
from board members of the
club.
Amoog the sections keep-
ing active is the crafts and
creative sewing group whkh
met this morning in the
South Laguna home of Mrs.
Harry Pell.
Collector's corner a n d
hobby section will stage IL~
meeting in the San Clemente
home of. Miss Getta Greeney
tomorrow at 2 p.m. Co·
Newport Rites Noted
Potentiaf
Projected
Empha.siting t h e con-
tributions women can make
in the business and pro-
fessiooa I community will be
the program to be presented
to Orange County Olapter of
ttte American Society of
Women Accountants.
Susan Ellen Hoff and
Mark Robert MaddreU, both
seniors at San Diego State
College. will be married in
St. Andrew 's Presbyterian
Church. Aug. 24.
T h e i r engagement an·
nouncement was revealed
by the bnde·elect's parents.
Army Lt. Col. ( ret.) and
Mrs. Raymond Hoff of Costa
Mesa.
Miss Horr and her Clance
are graduates or Fremont
High School. Sunnyvale. Sne
attended the University of
Callforma. Santa Barbara
and he was a studen4. at UC,
Berkeley.
SUSAN HOFF
Bride-elect
Meeting at 6:15 p.m.
Thursday, April 18. in the
Chart.er House, Anaheim,
members will hear Women's
Place in This Changing
World discussed by Mrs.
Julia Arri, lmmedlate past
president of C a I i £ o r n i a
Business and Professional
W<.>men.
Women accountants and
those in related fields are
Invited. Reservations are
being taken by Mrs. Gerald
Dunn al 529-7022 or N.rs.
Edna Stennet, 521-5252.
The bride-elect is ma·
j!lrin~ iii history and was ac·
live on the yearbook staff
and thr tutorial program!
wi · h Heads tart. The bride· !iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
· .n ·to-be. son of the Char-
' M"!ddrell~ of Sunnyvale.
, ma1onn11t In business ad·
,,~. .~ation and is a
-.1rmher of the accounting
"{'Jt?ty.
Test Sewn Up
Persons considering pu:r·
·hasing a new sewing ma·
chine should test lt thor·
oughly beforehand, 11ys
"irs. Ruth Ann WU.on, ex-
tension clothing spedallJt
·•f Pennsylvania State Uni·
venity.
Mrs. Wilson advUed buy·
ers to take ple~s of fabric
they tlke to work with Cit'
e1Cped to UM when vUIUDg
a dealer becaus. alor9 nm·
pies often are basJc fabrics.
From the ataodpolnt of
AMlll(A'S /)_ ~'ifl DR A. PE RY
LAHUT ~WJ~LE~NER8
llefMW W1tw D1mqe e HAMI 'llOO"NO
IXCLUSIVI
•UAIANTRD DIAPIRY CLIANING
Dr1,.ry Cleieftl"lo '9rf9ct
ret1nllet1 flf the ... flf
yew 4'rl'*Y, ... 111% ,...
"ICemertt If ctMMi.le.
• N• lhrlnk..-• N• wn._. H..,.•
• hrflCt ,.... .......
e 'wt.ct lnft Heme
e W1tw ltaln """"'
OUlt IXCLUllVI llllVICI
• PrwhstleMt tMtallat•
DRAPE Ry • Prflf..U-1 ll....-.11
Earl
Bride
Gustkey Claims
in Newport Rites
Making the.Ir home in Oor·
ona del Mar f o 11 o w i n g
a honeymoon trip to L a k e
Arrowhead ere newly mar·
ried Mr. apd Mrs. Earl
Gu.stkey.
The Rev. Dr. Charles
DiereDfield performed the
single ring ceremony in St.
A n d r e w ' s Presbyterian
Obapel for the daughter of
the G1etJn M. Fowlers of
Wa.keeney, Kan., and the
son oi the Earl Gustkeys Sr.
of Santa Ana.
The former C a t h e y
Fowler of Balboa Island was
given in marriage by her
father. She selected a white
floot length shirtwaist gown.
The bodice featured long
sleeves and ti.ny vertical
rows of white cotton lace.
The flared organza skirt
was caught to the waist with
a fltt bow and she donned a
bouffant veil and bow head-
piece. The bride carried a
colooia.I bouquet of while
roses, carna·tions and babys
breath.
Attending as maid or
honor was Miss J a n e
Gustkey of San Oie&o, the
bridegroom's sister. She
wore a pale pink floor iength
shirtwaist gown of coUon
organdy, and carried a pale
pink colonial bouquet..
Miss Patricia Spomer or
Fresno also attended the
bride.
Asked to serve as be!.t
man was William F. Berry
of Mountain View, whlle Dr.
Curtis W. Fowler, brother o{
the bride from Ann Arbor.
Mi c h . and Da vid
Harshbarger. of Cornna del
Mar ushered.
Soloist Larry Collison or
Vaporless Glue
Manufactured
MRS. EARL GUSTKEY
Single Ring Ceremony
Newport Beach was ac-
companied by R o b er t
llurstis al the organ.
Thr rcce~tlon followed in
lhe Newporter Inn where
J\lrs. A. Thomas Leggi~t of
Pasadena circulated t h e
bridal book. Special guests
were Mrs. E. J. Spomer and
Craig Spo mer of Hayii. Kan.
and Miss Erin Fowler or
Hays Kansas State College.
Presently she is teaching in
·a Garden Grove H I g h
School .
Her husband at lend e d
Orange Coast College and is
an alumnus of San Jose
State Oollege. He is a sports
writ.er for ttle 0 A I LY
PILOT.
Ann Arbor, niece of the =====~======::=
bride. BEST
The new Iv.rs. Gustkey at-
tended Gustavus Adolphus
Collrl!t'. St. Peter, Minn.
and IS f: graduate Of f"ort
Th• OAILY PILOT off•rt 1ome
of th• beat futuret, by ecfu•I
1urny of ru der1, eoiloble in ""f n1w1p1per in th• nation.
<'" , EXCLUSIVE 0"
<' )O COIFFURE STYLISTS ~,,t9 ~
)O EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ,,,,._, -\...~. ';. ~· 2750 Hwbof ltff. -C0tte M-O's.
RMldeRtlol Sldo of Colle90 Cetlf9r
540-2247
operation, lff lf tbe ma-
chlne runs w.U at all 1peedJ
and ii it ltarb and atop• ,........ ...... ~-•moomty. -
e TMM Mar h A,.,......
CLEAN .. ER~S=-~· ,~,..=.,.~""':;.:""=:...1t-r • ,,.. "-" Ora,..
The Buslness 9Dd ~
feulonaJ Womeo'a Club of
!;:!u~;,1!:~~ ;!.!~:!:~ 1702 IEWPOIJ llVD., (OSJA MESA ROBINSO EWPOIT FASHION ISLAND 644-2100
--
Tuesd~. Aptll 16, 1%8 DAILY PllOT J 5
HEALTH
SPA
BE A
LOVELIER.
LIVELIER
WOMAN
THIS SUMMER
In Just
6
WEEKS
Lose Pounds
Fast
Trim Down
...
Firm Up
Lose up to
10-20-30 lbs.
• or more 1n
Just 6 weeks
"REGARDLESS
O~ YOUR
• FINAL WEEK
FEEL LIKE A.
NEW PERSON
Enjoy Our
Whirlpool Batht
ind Danl1h Cokl
Pool
• Roman Ste1m.
• l'lnnlah Swn1t
PLUS MUCH
MORI
Orange County's
Most Ultr•
Modern
KEEP FIT
CLUB
"PERSONAL
SUPERVISION"
"Many Progr1m1
To Choo.• From"
., ............ c.--..0 • °""'09 ....... """ .... ...... c-.r
m1. .... ......... ......, ''r.:'a.:-c:.:. .. ,
5'9-3J61 126-0311 639·2U1
llt'Xt Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. ·"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I N'S N lo lbe Reuben E. Lee. ~ , ___ ---------------_-_:-_ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ll••••••ill••••••••••••
'
. . ........ -· . .,,,. ..... _. .... • .... -· .. J
ANOTHER LOOK -"The P"\ve Paces of Ma.
dame Ky.'" ortelnally telecast In October, 1967,
will be ahown tonlgbt on Channel 9 at 8:30 p.m.
An American camera crew, wortin1 with the
South Vietnam government takes a look at Ma·
dame Ky and her city.
TEJ,EVISION VIEWS
Final Show
For 'I Spy'
ly CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -The reproduction pro-
cess of the lumbering green sea turtle, which
often travela 1,000 miles to the off-Africa island
of Europa to lay ill eggs,. is awesome and inter·
esting. And intereati.ng too; are the little one-man
submarines built to order for Jacques Cousteau
• and his band of seafaring explorers.
AIC put them both together in a 11pecial pro-
gram Monday night. The result was the weakest
of the Cousteau uildenea series to date, but it was
still a fuctnattnc and at times a drama-filled
hour.
The spawnin1 habits of this huge creature
weighing upward of 400 pounds and which lays as
many as 500 •II• in a season, ate not exacUy
mysteries. But Couateau and his underwater
pbotographel'I were able to follow them around
the sea floor. u well u up on the beaches 11 the
females stru11led over the aand to drop their
eggs.
MOST interesting portion of the hour was the
hatching of the youn1 turtles and their furious
struggle to make their way back to the protec-
tive sea. The drama wu supplied by the hover·
Ing and sinister frigate birdJ who picked of! the
unprotected young turtlea at such a rate that
often there is not a single survivor in an original
clutch of 100 eggs.
The 1ubawine1 were intereitins addition• to
the Cousteau underwater equipment. but there
wu a rather phony drama l>uiit up in the series
involving what was alleged to be their initial
tryouts. The program, third in the series, lacked
the magnlflcent and unusual undersea photog-
raphy of the other1, but even with its shortcom-
ings, it was a superior program.
LATER in the evening, "I Spy" on NBC
wound up its three-year file as a pleasant 1ay
series, starrtn1 two jaunty il highly unlikely
secret agents ln Robert Culp and Bill Cosby. The
windup show was a rather silly tale spun out
a1alnst the sunny background of Acapulco.
As Scott and Kelly, leanin& casually apinst
some colorful drying flshnetl, faded Into the tele-
vision sunset, there was never a farewell, never
a hint that they had jmt concluded their final
caper, engaged in their lut bit of giddy dia-
logue. Oh IUJ'e, tbey•n be around for montba ln
the bot weather renma, but the epilode wu the
last show made.
GORDO ·
JUDGE PARKER
0
ly ... Wd
ly Hsolcl Le Dou
----------------~
ly Ferd JohftlOll
IOT .AFmt OUR J4oN&YMOoN,
l FOOi-i> OOT WHY rr W/.S so t>o<NON~ CLe).N.
J
TUMILIWEEDS ly Tom K. Rya11
MUTT AND JEFF
MA1LC•-' ·M~.Soll>
Lec'f~S 10~
•flU
•rttr NJ.T • ~~
lfBCf, IO, MLI I \\IS JUSf ~ ~ f~ YOO TO INOtAN lMJ)I
TWEN. 'Mff WERE \W MtJJr 10 HIT ME. WITH YOUR
ltYMHAWK?
ly Al Smith
ESPEOAUY SOYS··
"nEY COPY FROM -n4EIR F~ER.S
AND GR.OW UP'TO 8EUKE~IM!
TUf\O AY
.. = ...... fC) (tO) ,.,,
............... ('C)(JO) ........ ._ca ('90)
llllllla _..*'LIM M4
...... 0....
". l"CINa .... ('C) ..... ...... fWl*I) ,._.,. ...
.... ....., c.tell4.
......... (C) (JI!)
d.-...... (C) (IJ)
•• ...., ... (C) (30)
...... (C) (30) • ......-....,(30) ............... ~ .,,... ..... , ... llN." W.tdtobt
1114 llelr _,..... ••mtl'ltt tldl-
..._" ............. dttl ..... ........
8 CJ1B11D W ft =I a.. ~('C) DtfW.
liil dll1111 CM111a rMts Ill( cf\IJ.
...., Wlllit l.... .... • lllt
tit1t llovt Ill Dtlln. T tut.
at I IAw lay ()()) m ....... ,_. (C) <JO> · 1 .. •um ....,. fC> (30) ......
VI. Iran." ,.,..., GwwMf [I. Cl [ ..... hd IM f.,: .,,nl· 1111111d C. '?It" lrwll -' Ills »
""" Gr11111111r." ,,,. tx1mllllti011 Y•r·old -· Ed111Ulld G. '"""' Jr.
ff !low 1r1mllllf "'' leCic •" 111011 In 1 llnfJ ~ ., fulllle~ ......,lllble. cumitll 111 MJ ._
• Miit .. Jill Af.,1 ............ 111n (C) (Ill)
-~ CQ (311) .......
8 !m Cil Tiii -...C (C) (IOI ••su1111it 111..,..." l'lrt 1 " i. INfta. YlllClllt II alert.I tD a11 111111 ,... " ....iMtt tllt _,,., .....
... Wllllaill WW.. DllM ..,....,
Mlc:Mel "*'flll Ml [M,. Frw
..... (R)
II JACK LATHA9fwtth * late News/Str•lcht News
Wteknllfrts In Color
... 1'11111 ..... (C) (JO)
.,.. ..... (C) oat
er ... •r.-
• n. Jiii ........ ~ (JO) Gtor1t $._,.,.,, • --·= .,.. ......,,. ..,. (lltmf) '40-0ldl ,..,
..,, 'SI -FMUe '"'"' "'1ta _,...,
u. ........... JM'( ...
•) '4$-...... .....
Di\YTIMI MCMES ...,. ....... c-ml ·u-
111111 .....
... (Q .. ""' ..... ,.,,,,, w.e-... .._ n.. """""'
(*-J,. -... .,... .. (....,, ··---..... Rudi ........ ..... ............... ( .... . ...................... . -........... ....
..............
I "
fQ • .. .. .. .. .. ..
" .. • .. • ~ tir •
• .. • "" ' : .. • ..
• • "' .. ..
• t• •· "' ..
"'
)
lot ..
"' • ... -
"
11, .. lll-,,.
• ,.. ,.
II· ••
Ill) ,.
r •
•
•
,.. ..
•) ..
-,
T\lnd,.y, April 16, 1%8
Eor S11natner lff•leal
Playhouse Seeking 'Charity' Singer Alters Image ;
Davidson Goes to Bat for Hippies
"Sweet Chlrity" will be
presented at. the neit sum·
mer muaJcal production of
AWARD WINNER
The DAILY Pn.oT has won
m o r • awa.n:t. t r om the
Oran .. Count)' Pre• C I u b l than any other neWlpjlpu.
THE LUXURIOUS
NEW IAll.
THEATRE
HOMI OP tocllN' CHAii lOOU
I 70! CAST IAllOA llV'D. \ v.. BAlBOA rENINSUlA. m..co.ca ~
• CHILD Wint 'AllNT ONLY •
the Laguna Playhouse.
But befon director John
Fenacca begins to cast th•
ebow, be11 need a "Chari·
ty,•·
''We must fill tbe leading
role bef~· we riave open
auctiUons for tbe show," ex-
plained Jnna N o f z I g e r ,
general maDiag(!!' of ttie
~. "We're looltlni
Now Playing
At RecJUlar Price
C......,_ Sllews W•lr hyw
At 7:00 & 9:JO
5"4-y Z:J0·5:1 S & 1:00
-BEST IXRECTOIH!ld ZiMellllM
BEST ACTOR-PIUI Scofield
BEST SCllEIMPUY FR<* AlkllltER MEOIJM-
Robert Bolt
BEST CJMEMATOORAPHY (Cok>I)
· BEST COST\llE llS16N (Color)
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!
Cl)IA'M BIA l'ICTU,.."!~ FRED Zl!\\E.\1ANl'l'S
AMAN FOR
AJ,J, SEASONS
,_,..,,..,.,. ROBEITT BOLT ·'l'ECHN.ICOLDR
& COLOI fllATUHTTI "THI IOAD TO ST. TIOPU''
Exclusive Coast Run
Winner
of 5 Ac.demy
Aw1rd1
IEST PICTURE OF 1967
BEST ACTOR -ROD STEIGER -,. ... war"
Orange Coast's No. 1 Paper:
for a girl Who can &ing,
dance and. of COW"se, act."
When "Ohanty" la fou:id.
ttle playhouse wiU conduct
open readings for the rest ot
UM! cast. Girls interested in
testing fOf' ttie part sllould
contact ttie playhouse at 4M·
8061 for an interview with
Ferzac:ica and musical ~
t()a-Doris Shields.
Mesa Plans
Children's
Workshop
'Put It There'
By JACK GA VER
NEW YORK (UPI)
This is a rather 51>ecial
montn for singing actor
John Davidson
The• 25-year-old with the
aU·Ame:tican boy took is a
costar of "The On~ and On·
Jy, Genuine, Original Family
Band'' motion picture that
bas the prestige booking as
the Easter sbow at the
Radio City Music Hall .
Saturday night he was on
ttie ABC-TV network as host
of ''The Teen International
Pageant." Wednesday , he
will make his New York
night club debut as the
headliner at the H o t e I
Plaza's famous Persian
Room.
The month at$o hrought
the announcement that hr A drama workshop f o r
children 8 to 14 years oC age
will be conducted by the
Costa M e s a Recreation
Department, b e g i n n i n g Wednesday. ~aul Toft's problem is where to hide the plumb-
P£•ti Tambellini, resident mg when the mayor arrives and father-in-law Joe
director ot the Costa Mesa Wilson offers a blunt suggestion in this scene from
Cwic Ptayhouse, will in· "Never Too Late." entering its second week Wed-
struct youngsters in stage nesday night at the La~una Playhouse.
, will be star-host of three or
the "Kraft Music Hall"
variety hours on the NBC-
TV network June l2, 19 and
26.
AU of whlch should make
him most happy. but he has
one problem. People who
judge only by his clean-cut.
boyish appearance a r e
startled that he should have
some unconventional opini-
direction. Interpretation.----:-------------=--------
learning to read a script and
takjng direction.
Only children who havf'
ta ken part in d r a m a
workshops r.tre eligible for
the Civic Playhouse's junior
productions. The eig'bt-week
course will be con<lucte<I
from 3:30 to 5 p.m.
Fee for the workshop is
S3. and registration will be
taken &t the first meeting.
Furttier information may be
obtained by calling B:M-5303.
'Iguana' Tryouts Set
Auditions for the Fullerlon
l"ootlighters · production of
Tennessee Williams' "The
Night of the Iguana" will bf>
h1?ld tonight at 8 o'clock in
Fullerton's Muckenthaler
Center.
Director Lee Hollenbed.
is see:klng a cast o( eight
men and six women ranging
m a~e from a girl oC 17 to an
old man o( 100.
Performances will b e
l-~ridays and Saturdays Crom
May 24 4o .June R. lnforma-
bon may be obtained by
calling 879-fi636.
ons.
HAS OPINIONS
··rm tired of the 1ctea that
becau~e of a y o u n .e.
performer shaves. bathe!i
and doesn't march on city
hall on alternate Tuesdavs,
he isn't supposed to have
any opinions." Davidson
said. '· r have quite a few.
and some of them seem to
shock. some people "
Even With Jackie Gleason
No Battle of Egos on Preminger's Set
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -
Otto Preminger, known
v arious}y u t.he Hun. tile
Kraut and ttie Kaiser. is
making a new movie witti
Jackie GI~.
So far neither massive ego
has declared war on ltle
ollher.
Preminger is a man of
q u i n t e s a ent.iai charm
socially. But on a movie set
he is Attilla. Gleason is not
celebrated for his trae·
tability at work eittier .
One might safely say it Is
not pussycat time on the set
ol "Slddoo," the picture
they are making with Carol
Oltnning.
Spreading his h a n d s
berore him in a gesture or
innocence, Preminger was
seated behind a marble desk
the size of a ping pong table.
His hairless pate glistened
under a. bright light set 10
ttle ceiling.
''Mr. GI~ and I work
well togettle:-." he srud. "I
expect oo difficWties."
LOVED. BA TED
Preminger 1s a man who
is either despised or belov-
ed. No ooe. it appears. 1s
net1tral abo1>t him. Otto
wouldn't have it any other
way.
One who frll strongly
about him was pt.nt·sized
Irving "Swifty" Lazar who
konked him with a glass in a
New York restaurant a
while back resulting m a
sUtobed noggin for Otto.
tiumesa
I
6-·h"':,,• t, ._,!L~"'I' ")\T" M• 1
ENDS TONIGHT .... "'""• "BLACKBEARD'S
GHOST" --"8RIGHTY OF THE
GRAND CANYON"
Sttrta Wednesday
IT'S A RALLY!!
IT'S A RIOT-OF FUN!!!
SrEll.' fbsoLJ,..,, STMNs -Ru9;e1 J
.... ...... ..,
"Old Yov HMr The
One About The
Trnellnt S.t..,trlt''
• stampt>d as a director of a autonomous Otto has his in-
BACK TO COMEDY
Otto Preminger
particular kind of picture. securities.
"That is why I am doin~ "The curse of success is
'Sk1doo.' After 15 years I that instead or makinit you
hope I have not lost my seeurP. it makes you in-
sense of humor." he said in secure." he sighed.
accezrts of A Prussian of· "J have trained mysrlf lo
f1cer addressing a groveling become attached only to
recruit. people. not thinJ?S. 1 learned
Premin,eer gnoned a t to read bad reviews and
some unspoken Jt a 1 I 0 w s forget them. T have also learned nobodv can have a humoc and ordered two 100 percenl record of SUC·
specially prepared steaks cess. Jn fact. when I have an
from the Psa-amounl kit-unsuccessful picture ii g1vrs
ohMl. The New York cuts me more secuntv that the
are brought into the studio next one will be suct'es~rul.
only for him . LET IT SLfP
"Since 'The Moon ii; Blue' "The difference hetwccn
f have had comparative l>UCCCSS and failure in £ilms
freedom of choosing what I is thait you can make a
do. So thf' successes are lo mistake that is not his::
my credit. And the flops I enough ~o spend another
must take the hlame for" million dollars and four
Preminger has had some . More importantly, Prf'm· of both: "Anafomy of a werks correcting. So you let
inger is a producer-dtrector Murder." "Exodus.'' "Bun· it sup by. "You know in advance ii o{ significance. Wha4 he ny Lake is Missing.'' ''Hur. will fail. But vou can't
does with film carries im· ry Sundown." .. Act vise znci ~I ways play it safe ...
ct . ..... ·oo .. ~ Consent," "'l'he Cardinal.'' A former actor. Prem-pa ln uie I \LOO'W y. ''Carmen .Jones" and "Por· Two of his movie!\ are gy and Bess " inger still is superb al
cinematic landmarks: "The creating a mood with a
Moon is Blue" and . Man NF.W APPROACH frown. a gnn or a grimace.
Witt\ title Golden Arm .. Both .. A new approach kerp~ He 1s one of a handful or
violated the movie code and me fresher.'' he said. "lam seasoned dfrectors who has
were released without a basically a lazy man wd am survived the r e c e n L mcUined to fall into a onslaught of youn~ turks
seal. The first salirnl'd formula. You can't makr who have turr.ed the movie
vU"ginity. The second cirall another an)1hing and be inciustry upside down.
with drug addiction successful The reason for h i s
Preminger made 'The "1'h1s 1s my mot1 va llon in survival: Otto Preminger is
MOO() is Blue'' 15 years ago. cioing comedy again. J hope better at outraging the
Now. after a series of h1.1?hly (>('ople will laugh." establishment than the run-1 dramatic films , he is return-Otto's race 1 n di cat e d ny-noS<!d kids with their sex .
ing lo comedy. they'd bt'lter or there would violence and nudity. This 1s
NO STEREOTYPF. be trouble from Point Mu,1tu all old hat to lundly uncle
to Murmansk. But even Otto His reasoos: "It is parl of -------------·--------my character that I do not
wan1 to be hemmed rn or
Tune In the
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
County
Music!
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
From Fashion Island.
Newport Beach
For instanet', a Boston
newspaperwoman a s k f' d
him recently what h e
thought of the .hippies .
··1 hesitated be r 0 r ('
an ry, enng." the sm~er ex-
plained. "Should I say whal
people expect a ·nice' young
man whose father is a Bap-
tist mfa1ster, to say~ Or
should I say what I reaUy
feel -that in their own way
the ·flower ohJldren' are
searching for an answer to
the cold materialism of our
society ; that the I o v e
&
phUosopily lhduld be ej~ l
couraged, not rldlculed'
"Well, I gave tbe hon*;
answer, and some ~ t
n1ans were startled. t l
received some angry letters, 1
but there also was en-
couragement from others •
BE YOURSELF
··Much has been made of
the protest movement on
campuses today. Where It's
really at is a breakthrough
by my generation agamst
conformity. You can put it a
dozen ways -'doing your
own thing,• ·having yotlr
own bag' or whatever. Whit
11 boils down to is tbe
freedom to be yoursell." l
Davidson said that this
freedom thing had botttered
him for rome time.
"As a kid. I led a
sheltered life." he con-
tinued. "Then l went off to
college and came in coot.act
with people whose outlook
shocked the older establish·
ment. At first. I was con•
fused. Then I realized that a
lot of what they said made
sense.
'Beard' Author Claims
Society 'Brainwashed'
Ry OON HARRJSON
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Two guiding lights of the
hippie movement. beat poet
Allen G 1 n s b e r Jt and
playwright M i c tra e I
McClure. s a v McClure's
play "The Beard" is con-
trover.sial because "society
1s brairrwashed."
The pla-y depict.s an im-
c;iginary ene<>unter between
Billy the Kid and Jean
Harlow. At iL~ f'nd . the two
characters engaf(e in a
simulated act of ova 1
copulation.
McClure savs "at's not the
ohscemty" that sel~ his
crillcs off: rather. "it's the
idea that people are divme.''
"People don't ltke divini-
tv. amidst an und1vine war.
The most repeated four-let-
ter word in the play is ·star'
not what vou would 1m·
agme." McClure I o I d
newsmen S a t u r d a y at
Sacramento State College
Productions of · · T h e
Beard" have been stormily
received in California. Jn
Los Aniotes. police nightly
arrested the play·s two
performers. And a State
Senate invesltJ?atinR l'Om·
mittee hck! hearings to
d e t ~ r m i n e who was
respoos1ble for staging th@
play on Ute Cal Stata
Fullerton campus .
McClure a.nd Ginsberj[
said they believe human
bcin&$.-a.re "Cree. diviDe·liU •
mammals" that should not
be restrained "by a. 60ciety
that has repressed melf for
ttiousands of years."
Wes.tern outlaw Billy the
Kid and old time movie star
Jean Harlow ''would appear
on anyone's I i r; t of
America's top 10 f o 1 k
heroes. ln that sense they've
been quasi-deified. Th e y
represent what people want
to be," McClure said.
People are afraid l'o heat"
that they can be what they
want to be. Ginsberg 98.ici.
And that is I.tie underlymg
difference between the hip-
pie movement and "the
Establishmen-t." he said.
"This society has been
brainw~hed. Irs b e e n
brainwashed by powerful
white racist southerDef's,
the same men who are pro-
moting t'he war in Vletrtam
most rabidly in Congress,••
Ginsberg said.
''The hippies seek an
e n 1 a r g e m e n t of con-
sciousness to overcome such
brainwashing," he £.dded.
Cross word Puzzle
ACROSS
l B abtl
ltaturt
6 Coin of
USA ar.d Ca n11d a 10 Eschew
14 Entrap 15 "-qo
bra9h" 16 Pulled apart
17 Sh~rply
httlPf
18 Do 1 s~ll· '"9 1ob )q Ylr~tl1
20 s~y 1nq
ontt f!lore
22 B~c~ tn
9ood htAltlt
2 3 Gr~du~ltd stries
24 .... ltnt
25 Amn1can
Indian
28 Enq. wr19ht
untt
H Norm tn 9011
30 L~bor union: Abbr .
33 I( ind nr map
35 htltd
~mo'1 1bl~~
38 Border ol
golf tOUISf
9rren ~O Nr9~t1vr word 41 City In
England
41 60
45 L1vln9 -
46 Pronounc '
47 Strive In
11valry
43 Class
,
SO Man's
n lc~namr Sl Kind or
enclosure SZ Priclcly
slemmtd
shrubs
54 Dtlficull
queslton
S7 Lelttr for
lflltr
f,) Ste 5 Down
1>2 Sp. afltrl'I·
"''' ''" 2 worth 1>3 Hosp•t~I
emp loyro
f,4 AdJHllVt suH1x
f,5 Ac tor Leon
&6 Fr. insli·
11tte ol ltuninq
1>7 819word at U SC,
68 D 1st a se
sprtader
&9 Soclal
oulc~sl
DOWN
Cl Cone lus ion
10 Strutturil
member
11 Frost
1Z Force
along
13 Lack of
something
wanttd
21 Resort In New
MtxtCO
22 Color
24 Meat
• 25 Winter
weiring
1 Rulrr apparel
2 -· In 26 -and omeoa a while 27 To~
3 Distort 29 Hatlonal
4 Grtat Laku loyalty tnbe .30 Sundard of S Put Into suit· uttllr11ce
able lllfmy .31 Flat shelf
6 lorm of roe~
Apathr Cflf· .32 Chfmlcal
ll'Ol\y: 2 wonls prff1x
7 F tmlnlnf 34 • hold
name 36 Card galllt
I ···Vlst .37 -Franc r
'
~/16/61
39 Ntglt!Yt
answer
43 Turisgrtsslon
of dlvirTr law
H Othtr thin
the thing Implied
•?Whole
seed grain
Sl Of small
lmportJnce 52 Vt rtlcal
duel
Sl Kind of
rrllsh 54 Assail wilh
r~ated blows SS River lo
the Baltlt
56 Chinen:
Co111b. for11 57 Fruit
SB De-:
Too lllUtlt
59 S111all lend
body
60 Jan van. dtr-· 62 Sink
downw1rd
• • -• --'1/16 • • ..-• •• ~.--~. ~ -.... • ................. -~ ..,A,; _____________ • .._ __ ..... --._ ·--·• .... ·-··i..~ . >e ........... a a -. t •
·-. . . # • .... __ ,... .. --... __ .,.,,,,. _ _,_
• )8 DAILY !'!LOT TondiJ, Aprtl 16, 1%8
HOOSts Poa sALI I Roo11s Fo1t sAt1 RousES Fo• sAt.1 HOus1s FOR SAL•
Gtnenl lOOO Gefter•I 1000 Gtnenf 1000 Geewal 1000
HOUSU POI I.ALI HOUSH FOlt SALi HOUSU POI SALi
....... l• c .. M9la 1100 c..... •• ... 1250
TOP .
USTJllGS
I THE
TOP Alli
POPULATION
IXPLOSION?
One ot Mesa Verde's
lar&est homff will aolv~
the probl~ms ! 'Jbla 5 bd-rm. 3 beth. two story
Colonlal Beauty ls
across from park and
school. Complt't.e with
SVC porch, boat yard,
pantry, huae family
room and even an attic.
Over 3000 aq, ln beauti·
ful condition. Owner uldna $45.500
M~ Verde corner lot
with plt>nty of privacy
and a home th1t L~ per· feet for a pool. Easy IC·
ceu to bath and showtt,
kitchen and tamily
room. Beautiful carpets
and drapes, quality ap-
pointments throuat>out.
Price below replacement
cost 1t $35.500
PACISITTll-
$29,tSO
P'our bdrma and clean u a whlaUe! Heavy
shake roof, bom'd -on
board exterior and luml·
nous celllng in an a!J.
electric buUt·ln kitchen.
Great temul Only S29,· 950.
TAkl A DIVll
Large family home with dellghUul H. &: F. pool
surrounded with main· tenance free concrete
decking. Perfect for
swimming Ind diving
for the whole family. 4
bdnn, two story home
with huge family room.
&e It. ~2.500.
TOP VALUI
Just listed. Two ato-
ry, four bdrm family
home with charming
Spanish decor. Large
living room, l onnaJ
dining room 1nd pen.
eled ramUy room; all
on a large fenced lot.
Catch this low.Jow price -$34,900 ! ! I !
Hurry ! ! ! !
MISA VIRDI
$26,'50
Fahulous three bdrm
with new avocado green carpeting against llUU·
sive usro brick fire·
plac:e. Large bdrms and
new paint throughout
tremendous value at
$26,950.
COUNTRY CLUI
CLASSIC
Flawless two story fam-
lly h~ acrou from the Mesa Verde C.C.
Completely paneled den
with wet bar a.nd fln-
plac:e. oversized garage
with boat door. la.rge lot
completely landscaped,
and the home la "llke-
new." Priced at $59,500:
no thing comparable ln
Or8llgc County,
FAMILY HOMI
ChPck this! 2 story. 4
bdrm. 3 balh Carnlly
hc•me wHh paneled tam-
lly room AND formal dlnlng room. AU in
beautiful condition wtth ~h"ll: c:&rpetlng. itunken llvln.st room and terra.zo
till' entryway. Near M.
V J?olf courv. only
$41,900
II• LOTI
Ranch at,yle four bed· room alng~ story ln
Ml'Sa Vmle. Many Im·
,.,rovl'ments. cul-1Se-uc
looaUon with view o1 ll~hts by nJaht. Almott 113 a~. PriCed rtiht at $38.750.
DININ• IOOM
S1ngle 1toey, 4 bdrm,
wtth famJ1y room AND
formal dtntn1 Ara. Lu-it muttt suJ te and
1.,..-e lot. A ~ of a
bey at 139.llM
$16,900 IY OWNl lt lLLNf.3 fORCD SALE
5 leclroom.-2 Baths
BIG SEPARATE
RUMPUS ROOM
WATERFRONT LOTS
FM llDIOOM
SPAJISH NO GIMMICK.St DelMu Home• JDcamt
JUlt • .. 3 Bl', 1~ \ett\ Claltom-~t. .ii ..., ..
!'Oil nm walk tD dlie bMcb bome In top ccod1tlaa. Dltey dream ldtcheft, new appti..
fram ttu. oddllllY 5p9nilb hall, dla. u. (both car-Deel. w/• ~plus 2 loveJy
two ltOl'J' ~! Your l"fd peted), b.w. Goon. JD a 01 "":~....!'~~1111:
(Fee simple land) Waterfront lots, lncludinr
boat slips. from
$33,800 • HuntlnC)ton Harbour Safes Corp.
CALL DICK FABIAN -M7-2531
~ tile eatr7 Ooor, the ,_, 'Dal.J.t. A ~"""'~ .....;....,.~ _._...__._ e:xtras. ~ ·-ft.,
UUJN •-• and tbe C.M. fl>y a~ only>. Realty 615-Cll :=nu= ~w~ $22,900. 543575 OCEAN VIEW--
"Flcata" eo Yotir IUffis and 3 Bdrm 3 ba.thl Odwte 011 CAMEO SHORES ~ wtD ''Ole" and mlllVd quiet cuMle-uc street ml 3 BJl, A den, cu.ttom buJlt,
at tbe built·ln BBQ on your Mesa Verde GoU Coune. A-1 condidoo. 3,000 1q. ft.
covered pet.lo 111 your tern. Pool and wat.erfalla. Part!>' Drive b)' ~ Tttmont Ii
LIASE/llNT
2 car iarap with automat\c
door opener, SUNDECK,
NEW wall to wall carpeUna.
Wall to wall drapes e v e n
opr11 and cloee with the push
of 1 button. TOP COSfA
MESA LOCATION. A MUsr
SELL AT A SACRIFICE
PRICE. TAKE onr low in-
terHf rate loen. L O W OOWN. We will mail you lot maps ftc back yan1. ... 00> down • turnllbed. $55.SOO. Cooct call Roiltrt N1tt.reu Rltr.
wiJJ handle. terms. 612-14115
NeWl)()rt Beach start.ilia at 1225 mo. 2. !. It
4 Bdtma available. Many wltb Vl!WS. Upper
Bay area.
~ lf~-sc~:;:;· mt::· s,.cw.=
A I.arr' custom 3 Br home
tor only S37.500 ln Newport
Buch. 2(XX) IQ. fttt of ov,,._
sized bedrooms. 2% baths,
two magnUicent tireplace:t
and a large f1mily room.
A COOL POOL
2414 Vitt• .. Ore, ... ..,.,. a..ch .
OPIN DAILY U p.m. "'· 644-11a3
COSTA~ OFFICE
2629 Harbor Blvd.
54S-9491 Open till 9 PM
AROUND THE CORNER.
See this be-autlfully RE-
MODELED T W 0 BED-
ROOM home with BUILT· ONL y $500 IN PANELED KITCHEN
MOVES YOU IN and QUALITY CABINETS.
Fantastic Newport H~ghts 12'xZ1' DIN INC ROOM.
homt> -Completely ~· PLUSH N E W CAR.PETS.
orated. 3 bd:rms. 2 baths -Double gl\J'llge -ll.11Je rear
CUstom built . ins -Lease yard. LEVEL R-2 LO'I' -
option. S185 per moJ1lh. BUILD THAT 0 THE R
COUNTRY STYLE UNlT. This is a must ...
POOL HOME for only $19,IXX>. CALL ro
Country atmosphere with •DIAIYI. •••••llllllt bult trees and fenced pr-.,:1
den area -3 Bedroom• and
everythini in tip.top condl· --..:;.;.;.;.llliiii-
tion. $25,250 just 10% down.
646-7171 • 546-2313
OPEN EVE.5.
THE ~EAL
E S TATERS
DOYER SHORES
HOMESnE
Comtt location wtth m8g•
nificent vk-w adjacent to
SlS.IXXl homes. Drive by the
corner of Sentiago .i Gal.
axy Drive. Call oa for de-
taila.
Newport
at
Vidorf1
64U8l l
(Call
Anytime)
Secluded Charm
Newport Heights -3 bed-
room pltH guest house. Liv-
ing room with exposed
beam celling. eating area. ln
the bright modem kitchen.
Large trttS and lovely se-
cluded pet.lo. Paved area
for boat or travel trailer.
Sepe.rate guest houle bu Its
own bath and priV11 le entry
-a perfect in-law anange-
ment with privacy for all
S17.900.
Colesworthy & . Co.
642.1m
1904 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
Open Eves.
Deluxe Home & Apt.
Evening:i Call ~7800
5 BEDROOMS
$23,950
Hett la an eiccellent sihJa,
tion for a large f1ml1.V wbo
would llk.e to be only 3
blocks f r o m elementary
acbool and pl1}'8J'OW)d and
only one blocJc from Catho-
lic Olurch and school. Built·
in kitchen. family room. 2
_be th!. and nlce alze ya rd
for the kids lo play. Assume
~ tow, 51-2% GI loan and
$169 Inell.Ides principal, in.
interest. taxes and insur-
ance.
2043 WF.STCLIFF DRIVE
646-ml Open Eves.
Walk to
HuntinC)ton
State Beach
One year new and
this home sparkles!
4 very spacious bedrooma
family room. dream kitchen
coordinated carpets/drapes
larie lot at end of
a cul de sac street
priced at owners cost of
SJ6.250
Call Mr1. Pavlovich
Eves: 613-0316
6 BR Plus
fimily Room
CUstom built 2 BR le den. 2
bath home on desirable
CIUI Drive. Huge living room
with beamed cellings, aun-
ny dining room overlooking
the sheltered garden • patio,
den with comer brick ~
place PLUS smart B A Y
VIEW Income apartment.
Large lu.shl.V landscaped cor-
ner lot. Out of town owner Vacant & reedy. Beautiful
will ftnance et 6~ ~ inter-g1rden electric built·ln kltcb-
est! $47.500. en, 3 baths, lo•ely cold w/w
Ruth Pardoll, RHltor carpeting, extra stud yard
l&a; Westcliff Dr. 642-5200 with block wall. Large 5~%
~==~===~El FHA loan • price SJ5.SOO • make otter.
AcnvE NEW
BEACH OFnCE
needs experienced
SALESPEOPLE
Replies strictly
conflden tlal
Burr Whtte, Realtor
10!l3 Baker, C.M. 546-5440
I' \I I • \\ II I I I ~· \11 \\ll\\ ~ f \ I I I (. II
WANTED-
2901 Newport Blvd. Rell Eatate Sales People,
Newport Beech WHY NOT GE:T ON TiiE
Cformerly Art Kistler Of{ice) BAND WAGON?
675-4630 Over 25 Years ln
OPEN EVERY DAY Orange County ~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!PI • Full Piiie advertising CORONA DEL MAR • Inter office teletype
Wilk block and a ~ to Bla • Training Proaram
and Uttl, CoroM beaches • Insurance
Comfortable 2 BR hom . • Many other benefit.
brick frplc. FA hel l bl~ Call 6464494 • For Interview
kltch. Under $33.IXX>.
fohn macnab
B.AYFRONT
3W EaJt Coast HWJ. DOVER SHORIS
Coroo1 del Mar 6'15-3745 NEW 4 Bdrm, 4 beth, powdtr
Only S3. 7SO down. •
PaJM»ramic View
From th~ living l'OOf'l'I and
dining room of thb tarie 4
BR borne with huge rumpwi
room. See the bey. lights and
C8'tallna Island. This home
Is ideal for the family and
entertalnlng. $49.950 with a
low down payment.
•~esPR~NG
• '252 •REALTY
••• "ANYTIME"
1801 W estclill Drive
l/B
OPEN HOUSE DAILY 1-5
'TIL SOLD
522 El Modena
Newport HeiCJhts
3 bedrooms • 2 batba.. Custom
cpts/drps. • Bll/in kitchen.
Large POOL. plus lovely
landscaped patio. Block &:
Glass Green houSt>, Drcllti-
cally reduced tor quick ule
at m.ooo.
673-9200 Eves: 54U966
Exclusive listing with:
Bay & Beach
Realty, Inc.
2025 W. Balboa Blvd., NB
5~%
freely translerable without
loan lees or increase. Fan·
tastic • eorgeous 3 BR 2
bath home. Quiet tree lined
cul-de.sac street. 2 masiive
firep!Aces. all built-ins a:
lovely yard. Aikin& only
S26.500 • with only 10%
down or assume loan. CALL
~1151 • opeo eve.s. •
Need Elbow Room!
20U WFSTaJJ'F DRIVE For a b!r bot IWIUller
646-1Tll Open Eves. 4 BR.a 2 batha1 fireplace, caflo
HAit'°" VIEW-pe~ patio A beaaUtully Udo
HILLS landac:aped )'U'd. S23.900 • S30C¥I bandies. LOCKHART ~HG
CorON cMf M.r RLTY 141-3322 646-Dll -========-
Lualc • built boma located ~Verde; 4 BR. 3 Baths: &.Ibo. Island 1355
In the Soothlaod's most ~ Z«IO IQ. ft Lumcpd., auto. ---------sira~ l fuclnattnr area. •-prinlders l door apener. WANT: Home . l INCOME.
Schools • Calif. Irvine W.500. S.3100 Alt 6 PM Prefer Balbol I a 1 and .
Campus Just m om ents NEAR scboola. Z070 Pra.. Pl. Lai\1118 or near N.B. Rarbot'
away. 3 ll'Jl Br. iiatio, fncd yard, Prine. Ollly. ~125 eve.1-
SenslbJy plioed trom $11.500. Owntr. Sf9.%198 H ti •---S:W.900 to $48.900 un ngton ..... h 1400
LUSK HOMES Mesa y.,c1e 1110 -------~
Oirectlon1: MacArthur Blvd.
from P1dl:ic Cnast Hwy. or
Newport Fwy. Turn on San
Joaquin HJU. Rd.. then
follow slgna to model area.
Cambridge model, lax> ICf. RetfNtMnt RHCfyl
ft.; 3 BR., 1~ Ba .. 1S'x28' $p9ciowl 3 BR Townhouse
cov. patio; boat or trlr. tt.o-with patio, electric kitcben,
rage area. New w/w cplJ.ni; wuher. dryer a air CM-
511'% loan. By owner. ditionl.na. Only $11,900 -
HOUSIS FOR SALi RENTALS
L-.una IN<h 1705 Howes Unfvrnlthed
C..ta Mele J100 THE COUNTRY
GEN'n..EMAN
will be rilbt at ~ in
th1a ee.rly CalllornlA styled
home with olde SpiuWD
Influence. Nliuel eectlon of
Lasuna. 3 BR. form/ltv rm.
$25,500 • S2l600 DD. S150 mo.
Milllon Rlty 494-m3l
WVEL'l OCEAN VIEW
Lana! petio, uled brick frpl
3 BDRMS. 2 BA. $43,900 cau 496-1243 'btttwn 10..S pm
LOVELY OCEAN VrEW
3 BR Z Ba. tpl., decks. patio.
$33,*>0. Owner, 494-5678
3 BDRM EAST SIDE
Fqrm-din area I tpacioul Uv
rm. ' den. 2 ba. 8"aat yd,
nu decor, Lae S2Z5 mo.
642-14t1
3110
SPLIT .left; Republic Hm. 4
Br. fai:nlb rm. le'p. din!rw.
Lee opt $250 mo., $1000. i..
$2'7S. Vacant. 0 w D er
M6-fi616
3 lidrm, 2 ba, fenced yd,
pat.lo, cpta, drp6, olMm .
Lease $195 673-5809
j CIUCJOUS S3l.500. ~l!llS tenna. L.., Nituel 1707
4 -'"' IRS. BY OWNER. 4 Bdrms. 2 Pacitic: Shores fla.Jt>' na Newf!Ort BM.ch
baths. tam room, bltna. SJ6.8ll9t Eves. ~7 CoQI, 3 BR, 2 BA borne.
3200
for Just $1000 tot.II cash you dshwlhr, new cpta, extra lrg Ideal for ret1ttd couple
can own thla beauty. Com-yard. $25,950. GI 1 o an. $2900 DOWN--Or~ couple'• first
pleldy carpeted .\ draped, ~ Home. $24,900. A1lo I
underground aWltlea, sb&lce for th.la W!tY Jc. 2300 ICI· ft. 5 a)\, 2~ BA home nlcdy
roof, ~at landtcaplnf:. Newport BNCh 1200 3 BR 2 ba hem, fncd, cpta/ L&ndacAll)ed with s u p e r b
Ol\Jy 1% ~us old. $114 per drpl. Like ~. marl>le view.
month ~ya all. R ES 0 RT L 1 v 1 n i -frplc, panelled walls. Price S32,SOO. Atone &S791
COATS Condominium • e n Joy under ~ at 121,500.
& pools, putting green1. Bad-Calli 962-44n Dupln• For Sile 1975
WALLACE mlnton, lhufflet>oerti 2 f Bdrm.a. 2 Bal. Many 2-2 BR A..._ y--'
For L .... $300. per rno..
with option to buy. 3
BR condominium In the
....._ CGI 644-1009
3 ROUSES • rent fnim
$225 uio to $251)
CAyWOOD Rlty. 541-1290
REAL TORS ci011tt1. Prlv pet.lo. By 962..Wn 54&-1103 .... ""'• 1ar.,
--54M141-Owner ~ -~ ~ BEACH NORTH -::t ~-:id~:sa University -Park
(()pen Evenings) NR. Bay &c ocean; love!y 3 4 BR. 2~ BA. z .. tory. 5 ---------
3237
UNIVERSITY PARK -_ _ BR 2 81 home on 2 lots; minutes to be1eh. Family RENTALS
.:an UR a.a 2 apta. Rm. to room, dining room, 2 car Houtet Furnished 2 BR. 2 baths, l>Jt.in RIO •
diahwuher. Quick poa. $23.5
Rentals to Shire 2005 mo. on 1 yr lease.
Golf Course bid. $46 500. Sell all or ~ garage. Elec. blt·ins. Ce-
EXTRA SPECIAL Int. or f?ade. 121 ilst St., can me1t driveway, block wall,
Can you lmqlne being right park In rear Owner 673-2719 fenced yard. Nicely land.
on the fairway overlooking acaped. Foamer model SHARE my 2 bdrm. apt. 3 BR, 2 ba -..le '"' ,..
•'--11th •~ of M""• V•rde 4 BDRM. 2 bath. 5 yr old. '"-me. t 'l'f,000, C-" --er ... ., • carpe.., • uoe '"""' "'"" "' Club rl il g Be t ff "" ""' ..... v-u Matu~ wortdni woman • drapes, all elec kitchen. Country Cub? What a set· P v e ea. , 5 0 er 847-6640 aft 6 p.m., u ytlme MeN Ver-de. R.tu. ~2966 .i-• See lhla lav ly 3 bath buys. Urgent Sale. $28,000 weekends. BRAND NEW. Immed poa.
"''•· · e Open House Sat Ir Sun at 1---------eve. $250 per mo.
home with a I 1 r & e BRI, 151 62nd St. 675--0144. DOWNTOWN family room Ir den or din. 646-61ll, 547_7401 Cotti Mesa 2100 4 BR. %% ba, 2 trPlca. LOTS
Ing room. Huge glass pie----------of clotet a: storage speer. ~ windows, lnter. com. S LARGE Bdrms.; I v an 3 BR. 16x26 family room with VERY clean 3 bdrm home Ideal loc. on CUI de Sac Sl
etc. Lowest priced property Wells built. 3200 Sq. Ft. fireplace, cpta/drps, mod.er-with lqe fenced rur yard, Lease 1 or 2 yn. or will
we know of on the coune Many extra1. Assume 516% niud kitchen. 3 car p.raft, com PI et e 1 Y fumiahed. lease/option at S265 mo.
at 142,500. Try to beat It. loan. S75.000. 2100 Windward alley accesa for boat. 50iclSO' Mailable immediately. $115
College ltNlty $46.5llO Lane. OWNER 646-2828 lot. Price reduced s:m>. mcrilh. Agent 54&-4141
IMMAC. 3 BR 2 Ba .. bll·ina. BRASHEAR REAL TY Corona del Mir 22.50
cpt.., drpr. .. trpl. Lg. brick 847-8531 Eves. 5J6.l090 --~------
leach Home
+ Income
patio. Nr. Schla. $29.000 MODEL HOME 2 BR. 2 bl. /2 ldtc:bena, tum.
ITJ..04.50. 548-31.!16 CUSTOM FE.A TURES Houle. Garden. S265 mo. 514
BAY & BEACH
Realty, Inc.
2407 E. Coast Hwy.
Corona del Ml?
615-3000 Eve · • Sun S3Ul01
BAYCR.ESI' 3 BR. 2 BA, fam lmmac. 3 BR l~ bath + Femleaf. m.5360. 642.J645
3 BR\ 2 blths, l&rP Ll\I rm nn. 5*'1o In. 1935 Comm<>-large beaut1tnl ttcret11ion W. Isle Wl
lovely patio PLU~ 3 BR, dore Rd. Owner. 548-()8'75 room. BalbN 2300 ---------
2 bath Apt. $48,500. 548-0970. Haffdal RHlty --------LOVELY 3 bdrm, cpl.a, drpe.
LIDO SANDS WATERFRONT 62 Balboa "Homes to Match Income.. BEA~.;~~ B~ :.~ilo, leue ms
Then call&. inspect this SJlllC· C?1es 3 BR. $75,IXX>. Will 8740 Wa.mer 842-44Cli BALBOA ~
lous 5 + family room home. 3 Bdrms, 2 Baths conr.Sder trade. U &-mt TWO FOR THE Huntfngton leech J400
2351 It's fine condition renecta $23,500 W. OCEAN FRONT PRICE OF ONE Lido lale
loving care. Outstandlng George WllUuwon, RJtr. Om\er, 1 br, dbl gar, cpts, Nice 2 BR home, frfthly
electric built·in k I t ch e n, 6734350 OPEN EVES. drt>s. $49,500. 494-9271 painted + a rental on the
dlsbwasher. 2~ baths, feD-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!111!!!!!!!11 1 BY OWNER-4.-plex. Balboa back of the Jot. Priced for
ced yard, gprtnklel'1 near OffJ Blvd. Good buy! Reas. fast sale at $18,500.
224 VIA Udo m>rd and 725
Via Lido Nord. Call n3:
934--0920 213: ~
all schools. Price $36,100. Real Estate ce down. TI6-4351 Paul Jonn RHlty Huntington Bach 2400 ~-... -c§ BAYCREST 3 BR 3 Ba, pool. 847-1266 Eves. 842-584t
;-. 1~~11111 Includes land Ir: bulldtna. We • Own 4 br 2 b ---~ ----undentand the wt broker Lg. ram. nn.; beaut. decor. er: • a .• landacp., $56.500. Owner 548-2188 frpl. Xlnt schla, $24.500.
here 11t1t rich Ir: Mnt to ~ al s k nd Europe with bis fortune. By Owner. CUit bit. 3 BR. 2 t or w e •
I 2 or 3 bdnn on the l>Hch.
Pft'lll tenant.. no small
cll.lldl"m. 536.oon
1093 Bakl'r', C.M. Who's next? ~ property Ba. home. Lge. lot many OREGON bound, must aell! RENTALS
$7.00 TOTAL DOWN
-at 1790 Newport Blvd .. C.M. trees. Only $31.500 642-2859 4 BR. 2 BA. Seabaven home. HoVMI Unfurnished
Take cash TD'a, trades or Frplc. Sll,450. Owner 64&'248
Including All Closing aubmlt. Take ove.-loan Newport Hgt" 1210 --------Cotti Mesa 3100
Better c~~ T: ~ Free ~~ns~. ~ ~~ WTSIDE SPEOAL Fountain V1li.y 1410 BRAND n.w 3 BR. cpts,
Aree. 4 huge bedrooms. plus li42.4m. sllftal' Sharp drJia, blbll, mode.I home.
family room. 2 baths with --0-------On1.Y S700 total down . pay· . -r-· W mo. Mn. Mc:Qoud.
new beautiful good carpet· nfy $ 19, 950 ment. 6~ lnt., $124 moo th Delightftll, clean 3 bedroom • ~(l
lng with matching drapes. 3 bedroom • 2 blth home tn includes all • oo loan point.a Tb.ls home could be a model LO_VE_L_Y-. _N_ea.r_new--2-BR--lr:
Lush land3C8ping surrounds lovely Costa Mesa. Large to pl)'. $17,950 full price. All ~em conveniences • den, 1~ BA. fenced yd. Xl.nt
lhi.a enclosed yard. Buy of brick fil'l'place • Excelleit Thia older 2 BR 1 beth On quiet cul.(le-aac strett, area. Leue $200. Ovall Ma)'
the month! floor plan for ifOWinc t1m-home I.a cozy & investment great for children. Extra lit 60-7755 lft 4 FM
~
1682 EDINGER
842-4455, 540.5140 Open Eves.
FRONT ROW
BLUFfS
Customized for a couple with
dlacrimlnltlng taste. Xtra
lge Uv rm openina on lSx33
terrace. Fonnldinina rm w/
petio, $40.500.
lly. At end of cuJ-<le-sac wise. LOCKHART REALTY I a r g e IOt With covered BY Owner. 2 8Jl 1 blth,
street. Owner most KU due 646-3322 646-2301 screened pedo. clean completely carpeted le
to Ulneu. Bruer hurry! -N-ewport ___ H_elgb-ts_S_pecial_' -$:.:::: draped. 309 BrOldway. S160
Eve. &16-8259 119,995 pn mo. Call eves. 673-4577
2 bedrooms + ootajde guest 4 BR.. 2 Ba., Uv rm.. din.
room. ~ block to Newport rm., dee; $250 Mo.
•llih· 646-2042 549-1061 Eves Jean Smith Realtor 293 E. 17th St. 6*-4494 2 BR bouae. newly dU'Ol'llted
646-3255 no pet.s. $140 per moath. ~ S•nt1 Ana Htfa. 1630 19!H Pomona. CM
"'"""'' Have you~ in Npt -----....w..---Hitt 4 BR. 2 be frpl. for 3 Hae on "' ao-Ranes • 2 BR ~eJi, l~ be.. bit lnl,
121,800'! Cao be teen Inc. Tolal rent inc $4400 ~. ~ SJJS. 313 16th f1. ~ Owner. 2315 Holly yrlJ. $39,500. ~7249. 548-Apt A. m-«Ml.
Ln.., NB. an WbUe elepllan\I! Dl......a!ne
293 E. 17th St.
HORSE WCH
LEASE; 3 BR .. carp., drps ..
bltnz..; w1lk to achoola le
shcpplng. $1rf Mo.: Near
Brookhunt A Adam. 988-
2.807
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
NO matm wbat II 111. JOU
CUI all It wtt!l a DAILY
DAlLY PD.Dr ne..uw
ad.
AV AU. ImmecL nm Haven l ar. 2 be + 2 er 0cun __ ...... ~ _____ ms __ a._.ysho...__,... ____ 2225.;...;;..a.:;;..;;.!.ysho.::.:.:,;.:..;,...~--...:2225=::
Vu Inc Apt. $49..SOO. ~7249
Joe Cllrl<llOl'I
Coldwell, Wer & Co. noo I . Cont HltMr.., Ne--' IMcfl, c.llfotftl• l(t Nall ...... S~\\.{)~-/tf.-~S
Solve 4 Sfmplc Smmbltd Word Pu.ult for a Cllucku
TRIPLEX nn. dlnina rm. tarae Soda! :z=====z In demand re 11 ta l district. rm, Pier l SUJ>. 614 ';(. fj..
•• --. ..... ti the
f iwr IC70Mbltd """"* t.. low 10 fom fM 11"""8 wwdt.. Deluxe 2 Bedroom units. nanc:t.na • lSc;f. Dn. to qu.U.
TOP Income and a tern.nc fled tiu)o.r ........ S16'T,500
protectbl ap1mt lnftation. can for Appt.
INVEST T 0 D A Yr Ra.I 642-1235
V AUTE al D>,500. -----~ -
-
Eastsicle CM
2 BR home. dlning room,
banlwood Ooora. carprt~
~. double p.rqe, ac-ee• to l'MI )'Vd. Quiet
elate 1Tt IOCllUon. Sl 't .500.
W•ll-.McC1rdle Rltrt.
1810 Nt"WPQr't Blvd., C.M.
548-7'729 Eve-1. 6444184
. --~
----
·-'
0 ...
' l· • 'l'
i. ••
0
•
IO
7
~
&
15
'S
e.
l n
11 :.
1
I, rs
0
..
" IJ'
~
~ a r
d
, --... 1,1-....... _, -... -~ .._.__. ...... -I • ' . . -...... ,_ ........ .
Ti.dq, April 16, 1968 DAIL y PJL-OT 11 ':S''fTAl~ ltlAL llTATl ...... ANNOUNCIMINTS
a.Ml NOTICIS
---~ -.,..------
FAIWAY
YW jPn.
l H APTS
POOL
ADULTS ONLY
...... Univ"'"'". H ........... .._ .....
J'Olt rent 2 BR _,_ -.>t.
5'1ll level, 1" ba. cpt, drpe, .....,.,, dl&J, all elec.,
pool. encl pr. <:Iott to
~ Addt1 Into c.D ~
2 A S 8dnn 2 ba P\lot,
Patio. II 0 R A ICA.l. 1181
Gufie)d. Pvt •U.t l blk
N. oft Ca.rtitld. __.
OWNR POUND mam.., iaalie cat. D~• .&fl Vic. Garfteld A 8u.lba.rd ~""' Hunttn&ton Beech 86U907 MUST SELL ...,., 4116
Dana Point* A tWMr' com· LONCINES MAN'S WATCH.
mef(lial lot °" P9clftc Clout lnacripUon kkontitlea at the
Hwy. Chwmtltallica de-NeWpOrt 8eedl Police ata-
mand Ille ol t.bl1 choler tioo.
* * *
Mlneter Mn.. ¢.,•n
20122 S.nta AM Ave.
54,~
VOLTAIRE
FROM 199.50
5620
J.ce 1 BR, 2 BR, StudJol
Rotpolnt bltm, ~tl1r,
CPU. ctri>e. pvt patio.
pool. ncreatloo area.
property at once. Will Ok• FOUND oeu Mayfair Mkt ..
reuonable down payme:it eo.ta Mea. Glaaea In
and cany TJ>. Write Dall)' black cue. &t&-9293
Pilot Box P11. SMALL White poodle vie iiiiiiiiii•i!iiiiiijiiiii nortb Mesa Verde oU Claler Hart.or •mt. ANI 540-5293
50 x 11$ Jot MALE White cat. Vic o1
p11.11 ln\lll rental Corona del Mar. 673-8309
Wheddya Want? WhecldY• ~
SPECIAL CLASSIPICATION Pott
NATURAL IORH SWAPPIRS
Special Im
ns.ooo ------~-
Lott ~rte Wll.Uamlllll. RI.tr. 6401
5 lines -5 tllMI -5 bucb aut.u -AD ~ST 1.NC'-UDI l-Wlwtt ,,.., ...... le tteci.. ~ Yell ......... m s. l'alrvlew Rd. 541-1485
. <Betwn McFadden A lit St.~ HARBOR
8REENS
m.4350 OPEN ~. t-YOUll ..,,.,,. '"''"' ~ ..._. 111"9 et ..,,.._ ...... OTHINO l'Oll SALB -TllAl>H ONLYI
PARTIAL Oc8ft v le w : Lan' • Sun April 14, bone
white hantlbeg, p i p e d
w/black, 2 handles, 2 zip.
PHONE 642-5671
L•M IMCh 5705 Corona del Mar. Choice
o'slze lot NOT leuebotd.
Lovely treee. 17 3 • 2 0 1 0
Rftltor
To Place Your Trader'• P•rldlM Ad
MARTINIQUE
GARDEN APTS.
!00 CLIFF DltfYE
LUXURY roRN/UNJ'URN
YearlJ Lease. 1 A S BR
•• to Shore A Shope Oceanvft from every ~
from n&o mo llP·
$240
ltental1 Want.d 5990
WANT 1 Bdrm Unturn apt.
includin&. 1arage or carport
up to S100 mo. Coata Meaa,
Cd.1'4, Lquna Beach, etc.
For •mp Io ye d lady.
Parkllb aurround1np ~ after 5: 30 p.m. or
FURN1SHEI> BACHELORS _w_k:nd_a_. ------
UNFURN 1 BR • 2 BR. 3 BR w ANTED June .15 Oil Ions
2 batba available term leue, 3 BR boole,
Carpets. drapes, pna-C.d.M. Givt lovinr care.
. 11th & S.ntl Au, C.M. X1nt ref. MS-1010
MMm ~ Youns, l1nglt employed man. ae1Jb quiet 1 BR •Pt., near
beech. Att 5 PM, 11 toll, call
<.'Ollect. 213:280-1610
R1nches 6150
2 • 4 ar f Acrea of Industrial
property dole to Riverside
Frffway In Anaheim. Will
exchange for Improved com·
mercial or induatrlal prop.
erty with Jona term leases.
For more information ool ..
• • Walter Frick
Eckhoff •nd Anoe. Inc.
l8l8 W. 0.pma.n Ave.
Oranie, caiif.
541-2621, Eves-wknds 538-5747
6200
TO SETTlf EST All
2 1/3 ACRES
VACANT LAND
per pockea on outaide. Con-$5,000 lst Trust Deed. EX-
taina im[><rtanl personal CHANGE for late model car
papen, value only to me. or boat or ? 6V~144. 646-
Uberal N!'Wvd '°"return or 61U 547-7401
lnfwination. 540-8395 or1--·-------S42...,.'161 '66 Olev Bel AJr wag 327
BLACK Labrador Malt slip eng., fact air, auto trans.
chain chollar. Vic 16th Pl & PIS, R&H, Sl950. WANT
Tustin Ave. C.M. Friday. small motor bike or camp.
Valuable rer. dog. Reward. er for equity. 536-1131
Please 5 4 8 -8 2 0 7 ->r l'RADE: 4 + tam rm + din
£73-4510 rm + detached rumpus rm
LOST Small white poodle w/plumbing for 4th bath .
Costa Mesa Park. Name Want: lot, units or small
' 'P t p e ' ' R e w a r d . house. Rltr. !>46-5880
Heartbroken Mr 1.w ANT VAN CAMPER
GustaflOn. 543-5749 or 690 HA VE automatic '62 Chevy
W. 18th St. Pickup. 16' Boat. 35 hp mo-
MALE YoritShire terTler. tor I. trailer. 842-3798
Broken rear leg. V i c TRADE $20,000 eqty 6 unlt
Cypress lc Ordw'CI'. S. A. apt. LONG BEACH for rcsi-Heighta. Needs medsw at-. tention. 5 4 o-49 34 or dent1al Newport.Costa Mesa
64&-1664 ask for Linda area. Call eves 673-8945.
LOST Sunday m o r n in g Wn..L Exchange '! ftte &
Siameae aultered male cat clear lots., close-in Palm.
new to nel&bborhood Harbol-dale; $8500 V1Llue, FOR eQ·
Hill! area, CdM. Reward. ~al equity in local house or
61'1-2333 mcome. 545-4412 eve.
2 V3 ACRES commercial DARK Brown f 1 What do you think of our
zoned CC-2) on major tho~ Burmese cat d:C'f.~e "TRADER'S PARADISE"
ouihfare in Santa Ana. Mo-Loet vie 6tti le 'eay, Balboa: Drop us a card. Ouaifl.d
S 2 ... 'II 128 1u .. ft..... LADY wantl url CdM. 1 or 2 tel, apta., b!sineu, trailer ..LamllY Jieartbroken... Rw.d. Dept, P.O._ Box ~ D~
-PAC .,.,,~ • ~---Bdmi XpCor iue:-Pifio,-or partcor-bUier cofil1nerclat 67!>-5136 Uof, NPt Bch, Calif. CaNrpe~t.-drapp1~ ""--~IaL! yd, nr lhp cent. to $150. 213: OK, or hold tor Mure in. ear .. .., .... • l!IUlUU • 596-f726 creaJ!t' In value when Bol!ill
Prom $110. Ave. tul)y drvelops into ~ MIXED Female puppy , *
white I: blad<., long hair.
Red le gold collar. Vic * *
APTS le Busl 1.0ned VU. land
tor 7S+units. Se.n Juan ca.
po. 700' front. can ~ t
lots. S81M ~-Trd m. J
Owner. 494-4957, 49M653
Beaut. motor home Camp-
er: want lat or seuoned 2nd
T.D. 's: Oranse CoWlty; or
. ! See at Enco Station.
Fairview Rd. Is Fair Dr.,
C.M.
Leaving State. Trade flJ:rD
Triplex, 23' Cabin Cruiser,
or 11' Hse trlr. for car,
travel trlr, trailerable boat,
TD's or ? ~7616
'66 PACEMAKER Imperial.
2 BR Expando, Uv. room.
TRADE equity for late mod-
el t.-ar. Ail< for Dick -54S-
291>1
2 BR dbl wide mobile home,
clear. adult deluxe park
across from club house.
Want: clean E'side CM du-
plex. Prine. only ~~
'66 Fon! Oltry Sed. S.,...
390, loaded w/extras, will
trd equity for transporta.
tion car.~ or 6£6120
* * * Mgr. 2214 College #2 WANT Inexpensive winter Jane blvd. Sewer line stub--home from Sept. to June. . ---------Newland le Warner, F. V. SERVICE DIRECTORY 847-4117 NEWLY PAINTED Beach area. 673•8848 bed at property. Ample
2 BR w/1ar fenced priv water w.mply. Drive by 4n7 • • • ~~.. CREAM -ft•-•Aa~up .......,i•-Brick, Mason"", etc. Patio. Water paid. Roome for Rent 5995 w. Bolsa, Santa Ana, then Vic H,;._,.,Rd"' •:" Old~N: • ' 6560
Gardener maintained. phone owner 542-9533. -,. • .,.
2228 "B" Placentia Av. noo SLEEPING rm for working Blvd. NB. Silver eollar. 10 Acres. So. Calll. $8 Down, ~ ALL TYP~ id a 1 on r y , Please look & then call man. Prlv home A prlv entr $8 per mo., $795 full price. Brick, Block, Cement work.
5l7..o380 By Mo. only $35. lM3 L. Shewfelt, 326 W. 3rd St., SMALL male Olihuahua, Also repairs. All types ear.
Maple Capn" Otanse, C.M. L.A. Phone 213: 623-5102 f8alllwn Nw/white marks, vie. pentry le Rootina. 636-2916.
CO.U'llV\RTABLE room for -ewman, Hunt. Bch. SPAC 2 a S BR, Hi baths me"' 10 ACRES. Kirby, Oregon 842--2242 Reward BRICK, Concttte, CArpen-worldnc man. Private to-S8!iO Per Ac.: 29% Down try CUstom C.blnet.s Small Cpta, clrpa, 2 pool1 trance. 2028 Santa Ana Ave., LOST in CM: 2 pr of pre1 jobs. OK Free Eat 962,.o945
Near shp'z and vhoola C.M. 546-0747 eye sl8111e1· Finder please -'----------
PROM $99.SO $1-2-.50-UP--w-k_W_/ _kl_t_cb_en Out of St1te Prop. 6208 call 54&-S4!16 Reward. · 6590
Mgr. 1998 Maple, #l $22.SO \Q> Studio Apts. 2384~ LOST: Vic o! Hamilton and C1rpenterang
HARBOR VILLAS APTS. Newport Blvd. CM 548-9755 NEW KINGMAN ADDITION Meyer Pl., a blue parakeet. !NO JOB TOO SMALL!
2 Br Studio Apts. ROOM for working man large lots, water, pawer. Call 548-<ne after 6 p.m. Residential • Industrial Com·
Cpts, drpa, bltns, btd swim ., / kttllcen prlv. $55 mo. $695 full.price, $10 down, $10 LOST gNy, black le white mercial ·M a Int e n an c e
pool. Lndry fac., free park-Costa Mesa M2--0326 month, no lnteft1t. Free pie> cat with crooked e a r . Repair Ir R e mod et
Ing. Mr.r. Apt B-1. tures, maps. Wrlte Box 486, "~ASS". 546-8437 Reasonablt. Ur., bonded, ·1
2 BR w/rvqe Ir reftig. Ne'ff $12.15 up. W·W ~ Kingman, Ariz. sured.
Lockable garqe. 1 or 2 Kit. anil. Se in i. Pr iv • ---------Personal1 6405 • 962-1961 or 642--5064 •
children welcome. Nr. 19th A S46-83$. 1.35 Albert Pl. CM Mount. & 0...rt 6210 ---------REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS
Anaheim. n~. 642-5111 WORXJNG " Coll~e girls NPl' Deb Tenni1 CI u b CABINETS. Any size job.
live Oii Bal Isle, Kit l 5 ACRES -.ubdivl1lon, 811· memben"'1 for aale. Moved 23 Yra exper. ~3
rec nn incl. S55 mo. 6$3813 ;;r ~!~. 18 .~ ~ from area. $400. Ra~ton, • Olrpentry • Cabinets •
8640C-"' Dunaway, La olla, • Bit.'--• Alt-•'ons • Lakea", 80 man.made lakea cuu """ ...... v
in aru. Alfalta, t1ah ral._ · • Repaira •Reas! ~9583
Ing, recreational, many de-~V~al ~;!Y ~11~ CARPENTERING le Roof·
velovmenta In progrea. Membenhlp, Incl. a 11 ing All typer. e All work
Call owner 84'7.-.0 aft 6 transfer costs. (1) 493-1069 guAranteed. 539-6729 p.m. Weekendl anytime.
DREAM C.btn Ir 2~ ac.
with beau. view. $325 down
Ir only P> 'Pf!!' mo taku It.
Ask for ~. SINGLE Guya. . 4().5() for Cement Conc,..te 6600
Gourmet· Bridge group ---'~----
(mixed) Box M·90, Dally CONCRETE, Block, Spanish
Pilot tile, Wl'Ollght Iron, wood A
BRECK N01T RLTY 548-6355 SINCERE rentleman, 35, like alum. patio rootl. LiceNted.
to meet lady n-30: compan· 547-5320 ------------1 o nshl p. Exc.haJl&e pbotoa. CONCRETE. block, Spanith
Dally Pilot, Box M-86. tile, wrought iron, wood A
ALCOHOUCS Anon,ymoiw alum. P6tio root1. Llcemed.
Harbor Area. Phone 673·872f 547-5320 P.O. Box 1223 Costa Meta. -.-CO-N_CRETE ___ W_O_RK--.-
Of All Types. No job too
Announcements 6410 Small. Call: 892-1038
CUSTOM PATIOS l Coast Health CJub Block walls. Also concrett e FREE SAUNA • sawing & removal. 842·1010
With Swediab DWS11t by CF.MENT Work of any kind
7 Experienced Maasuese' at lowest prices. Guar.
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK workmanship. 642-8514
SERVICE DIRECTORY
G•rdenfng 66IO
ANTHONY'S
Garden Service
646.1941
COMPLETE CLEANUP
NEW LAWNS
Reu. monthly care. Pnm-
ing. Landl!Caping. Exp. bor-
ttculturlst.
Lawn & Yard
Upkeep
rototi I, grade. 54()..8206
Japanes. G•rden.r
Exper., complete yard
~ce. ~ estlmates
• 548-7958 • ----EXPERT Japanese Garden·
er Lndac'lng, Cleanup. Main-
tenan~. "MACK" 847-0132
JAPANESE exper. landacap..
cleanup • rqular garden-
ing. 642-6198 aft.er 5
JAPANESE GARDENER
Maintenance by the month,
Good ~ Expel' 546. 7758
Cut & Edge Lawn
MaJnten&nce. Lice~.
543-4Q • ~70 aft 4 PM
EXPERIENCED Gardener * Landscaping -Cleanup * Reu. & R.ellable. 642-4400
e JAPANESE GARDENING
Service Cleanup, Landc•P-;
inl· 531-7034 aft 7 p.m.
General S.rvlcee ~
Palnt:!ni, Plumbinc, ~
pentry. Reul Rel. Insunct.
Be.nkAmerlcard OK
Call "Mike" 64U348
Painting, Plumbing, Car-
pentry. Reas! Rel. Insured.
BankAmerlcard OK
Call "Mike' 642-0348 9 e.m-10 pm CEMENT work, all t)<pn.
132 E. 11th Sl ~ So job too small. Free eat. =========I
>
H. STUFLICK 548-8615 Hauling 6730
HAUlJNG + GENERAL
<l..EANUP
You name it -I haul ft
Reu. Big John 60-4030
./ HAULING. Trub pickup.
Trimming, Anything-we do
St all. EJq.ert .wk. 545-2'192
SA VE MONEY * Before you
Take It to the dump call
Us! 646.9188 Ol' 642·5666 '
CLEAN Lots, garqes, etc.
Tree removal, dump, sk_,,
backhoe, till, grad~. 962-876
-> -., =--a> ......
. -.. .,,. .,,, . . -. -
20 DAILY ,lLOT
~t:RVICk OIREC roRY T~, """
11 16
• lM "M UllRCHAHDISI FOR MllCHAHDtSI FOR JOI$ & iMt'LOTMIJN• JOBS & IMPLOYMIHl ~_!~0~ ~.~LOYMENT ~·-~LOY~ JOBS & IMPLO. ENl SALi AND Tit.ADI SALi AND TUOI
~r>erh•ntlnt
P•lnt1ng 6t50
Help Wanted Men 7200 Help W•nted., Me" 7200 Help Wanted, Mitt 7200 A8et'l1'-. _,..._ 1300 Help W•nte4 .W. ~ W-. 1500 .-ftt---& ft.-.
81
_
---------Women 7400 furniture --._._.,. -,ax .... 5400
lNTERIOR le ut pa.inllnl·
Prices sl~hed ror aprini;
clean -up. t'rt'e eat. 30 yr
up CaU ChucJc II ~14
rAINTtNG -Lny niom S20
'.Ve ~ .. Sinclair" pamts.
>Jn1 work. ~ra. 847-1358
FIRST CLASS Painttna &
Paperbaogtna. FREE ES-
TlMA ~. 56-3'\59
• PAINTING -lnterlor &
olerlor. Re f e r e n c e s
Re,1.sonable. 894-3408
e PAINTING • lnletior &
Extenor Free estimates.
Rnaonable rates. 646-3015
r.-ITER or Ut. PAINTING.
l:>tMED. SERVICE. Local
ref FREE Ht. S.U-l6'l7
VET'S Bonded Pa\nling
Int ur Ext. 10 yrs in are•
Reas. Free Est. 642--0-t17
Plumbing 6890
LEAKS'! Gas or water clec•
tronlcally located under cE-
ment. blacktop. ground,
walls, showers. any plac,.
Repa1red. Water linn clean-
ed, pressUre restored.
CALL "LE>-'<S" ~ Ban~ricard OK
Pl..UMBING
REPAl.P~ REMODEL
642-3128
S.w~ng 6960
Alrer•tlon....-642-51-45
Neat, accurate, 20 yrs. exp.
TILE, Cer•mic 6974
* Veme, the Ttle Man *
a1s1. work. install le ttpaln.
No job too s~. Plaster
patch. Leaking a h o w e r
repair. 847-1957/846-0206
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Job W•nted, Men 7000
tAN -42 yrs. old • 18 yrs.
1-.:n•{i.neering ~rvlces exp.
Familiar with Mll. Spea. &
Stds • Exttt>tionail ly w4'il
diversified ~
Alter 4:00 P.M. 962-<JlBS
llQTEL.Apt llgel Mgr. 50
Avail Immed. 25 yr. exp
Will re-locate. Reeume (n4l
8~7-1212
Skipper/Engin~r
Boat MaJntenance, Full M
part time. P. O. Box 1041,
C. M. 548..JS61
YOUNG. capable "*' would
like to ttf!fil Oft Y acbt heed..
ed West. Wil pey. 893-291'9
Job W•nted, L.cly 7020
~. Prac. NUJ"'l!e tor Cof).
valescent or lnva.t6d C.... • R~llef Sblfts OK Re 11.
5,; -'i090 -Experienced ~
To:> skllla A: re:terencM
67H580 Alter I P .J(.
SWIM INSTRta'OR
2 yrs wor1dns t'~.
REUBEN'S
& COCO'S
COOKS
in·
1n
growinq orCJGn·
iaation. Excel-
lent insurance
p I a n & profit
sharin9. Please
apply in person
between 8 & 4
P.M.
1555 w.
Adams,
Costa Mesa
DISHWASHERS
11 or OLDER
NIGHT SHIFT
APPLY IN PERSON
~11 and 3-5
REUBEN E. LEI
151 LCout HJghwa,y.
Newport h•ch
BARTBtOfR
Reliable. experienr oo.
Part &: full time.
Apply in perl!OO to
Mr. Bill Jusaeaume
betwttn 11 & noon t\ 5 & 6
except Monday & Tuesda,y
Newport H.,bor
Y1eht Club
720 W. Bay Aw.
Nl'W'PC>rt Bead!
$14
WEEKLY SALARY
W1ll
llllfY
Dishwashers
Busboys
Apply In per.on
Coco's
Famous
Hamburgers
78 fashion Island
Newport 'each
YOUNG MEN
WHO HAVE THE
DESIRE FOR MONEY
AND OPPORTUNITY
$600-~00 PER MO.
Join 1' national Cu
Oper:tllltg in 50 states
Car neceSSllry
Agei; ~30
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
TO $18,000-$25,000
Retireml'nl
ln surnnrr, Stock Op110n
Pmfit sharin~
CaU lor mren•1pw
633-5937. e>.'1 :'1R
Mon & Tues 9 am·9 11m
DISHWASHER
Momina
GrPat opportunity for am-
bitious yoong man. Apply U\
)'>err.on between 2 and 5 pm.
daily. __
•
Snack Shop
2305 E. Co.st Hwy.
Coron• del Mu
AQUA-AIRE
NEW DIVISION OF EAST·
ERN MFG. FIRM NOW
JllRING. WE NEED 22
MEN TO TRAIN IN ALL
DF.PTS. NO EXPERIENCE
N"ECESS., AS WE TRAIN.
STARTING SALARY
$495 PER MO.
FOR INTERVIEW tALL
MON. & 11.J~.
54 7 .()6() 7
BORED &
TIRED
~ watchlnit 1V eves between
I ' 10 P.M. & would l'ltber Your pool. 615-3151
CARPE."T ~ ftq
lllippillg. Wuins, WaJ11.
Window1 wubed. m.-r
Ao 19-35 work "' ee.m • weekly saJ-11 J'Oll need .m.. money to ary of
s-7 far tboee Eater aotflts;
Mr. WtirU PR 4-2ml
DA YWORK • local .....-nt
Xlnt cl~. B-. attM • BoAt Aseemblen
Beach area fl. Hr. m--31181 e ffelpen
DA YWORK • CarpmU!n
3 cay.. 5'7.&m • PaJnten
I .======:i::::s=:s e ~ Maker
IOomestlc Help 7035
$72.SO
Mr. Almuns 'n4-2020
JANITOR &
GENERAL CLEAN-UP Jen.en M.rlne Corp.
2S5 l'hber, Costa Mesa Service tlepArtmenl. Autom<>
TEN'DER Lminc ewe h I bile experlt>ll('e. Neat in 11~
yr old cirl. di ... lloY. SALESMAN J>f'lranre. Cont11ct -Service Hs~. Llw ID or eut. Mana~r.-. Bob Ro~ski.
49H864 att.r I pm A8u ~I'tYmooth-lm· NABERS CADILLAC
---...,,.1.JVE'="'=""'='IN::-:S-=---ps;.]. ~ io Orang, 2600 Harbor Blvd.
Employer ~ 1ea Ouity. Demo. plan,~ Cosla :\fe11a
Grorge Byia.od J.cmcy paJd commission. Pllkt boll---------
1
100 B E. 16th, S.A. 5'7-0395 ~. paid vacations, _.)(('('!-S•le1men & M1n•gers
lent promotion potential, ex-Career opporty with leading
('IU11ctie -F.ngfisb • Frel:lc'h oellerit training pl'Ogl'l\m -firm offering over 100 mu·
Prrmament. ~. Un-In no experience nece!ISary. tual fl.antis. Full or pt time.
j :•r East Agcy. &42-9703 Apply in penon. Ask for No exper nee, we train.
Mr. Robert!t. 2929 HIU"bor Npt Bcb oU!ce, 642-6422
IAgenci .. , Men 7100 Rivet., Ol!!ta Me"8. Santa Ana otfitt!, 547-8331
,,, Jobi Are · lovmors Financial
Our Butlne.s" Pickwick Book Shop ~ •. lnc.
Need& Astgreuive young Coast Employment mM to team book bustnes.,.
AGENCY Experience helpful but not
Id nPCes!lllry. SeP Mana~rr Simla Ana Prof'! B 1 South Cout Plata. Costa 11;10 Santa Ana Ave. MeM.
Cc1t1 MeH 642·9611 Service Station
Hr~ 8· 30 am-5 pm Mon-Fri. SALESMAN
'Cntrll conl admin ex to 17K Full time. Good salary ..L.
I Prod Super1pkg eJq> •• to S660 bf'nefits. Exper. ONLY 11~
~~~m1 lme/sm suprvn to S500 ply. JlM TICE CHEVRON
Experienced
Plumber
Earls Plumbing
1526 Newport Blvd, CM
CARR IER BOYS
/'.'tGUS EMPLOYMENT 2590 Newpt>rt Blvd. C.M. AVAtLABLE
CO~SULTANT AGENCY c w h H ' HUNTINGTON BEACH
GOOD ROUTES
"1 Westclitf. NB 548-7796 ar GS 9 p
1 ·11 E. 17th, S.A 547~ Full time or wbnds. DAILY PILOT
1r·:; Cre!!'nl/Anbm 61Hl941 Min 1~e 111, apply in rer1!<m ___ •_&12_-021_·_• __ _
I UDO CAR WASll
• •••,,..,ted, Me" 7200 4R1 E. 17th Cos~ Mrs.i BOYS 10 • 14 I -Good routea! • Good profit' Jf.m·11l boat assembly. Re-JANITOR • nlgbtll. M11n BALBOA PENlNl\1.Jl.A
'lllln!s experience with hanrl M~t be capable or t:ik· DAILY PILOT
tools. dritl 'Pl'e-9, etc. Sm.1111 !~ ~ ol lnn:r huild-e 642-4321 e mg. S2.2S an hour. Wr1le shop, steady work, age no 11111 quaJlf.ications lo P 0 . --
ba.nier. 646-3901 Box 1307• Costa ~<11.'sa. Comhinatlon. E s t I m all)!'
EXPERIENCED S e r v I c e SERV Sta Attend. ~ Buyrr It Warehouseman.
Station Salesman. NI timt' Start 111 $600 to $650 mo. L.a-"'-at clean. bi volume. Tuan> ~"" 11111~ art"a. water Co uaY)-Apply Andenoo Union 1tatlon. MUST havt t'XTI & £'! Ph 831 ,_,,, Scrn~ 164.'i Adams. Costa good rets. boel !181 to rillflt Jl Jll't'fernd. """""
"1P&a man. Contact Bill Gut for -'°'_3_PP_._•·------
SERV1CE Sta. Attf'ftdant appl. 546-1757 ROUTES AVAii.ABLE FuOUm~. Exper .. over 25. SERVICE stat1on anlt'll ln
Apply Bob's Mobile. Spring. ElC'p. tu~ Ir hrn~~~ Wr1tmln1ltr for boy• 10.14
• dale Ir F.dinger B.8 . Older man O.K Excellent ~ Proftt11 • No Sunday
SERVICE Sta Attendant, aalvy .\ romm ~ D~Uvt'f')' &C2-43n
'VV'1' :n. ~t mech npt<r. Stilt~ Ada.mt .. M•stnol.18. POSmON-0 r E N-rm.
UnkJn StabOn. m Sup«ior, Hunt!~ ee.ctl. qm.llllrd Rt31 EI I II I ,
NB AIMmMy Tni"... ~lt'lman. For detal\I <".U
SERV Sta. Atteod. P/tlme. 0..V It Nllt\t Shirt Mr Stauffer 11 Don V
Seeded ~ It wkn:b. ~ c--.. "'"-'• ..rn--......,. _,...~'Blraat -,..... -M_~:-.. · ~ -..,.~ ·----~~IM~~~-·M~-"« =----~~ ........... "'" _.u;u 18115 ~ c.Jif. MW'IPll""' dot~. Mu1t
~ EX p E & ll ·-'-_c~ l{l'l'OfEN KELP'ER • FRY ~ ~ cara be lltpfM.
0...-~ Afply1 COOK. COU~e afudrnt noon able. Wr1t.e: PO Box TM CM
Kai'a. 2773 Rater, CM to 5 p.m. 6 ct.ys. App I)' • SERVICE StaUon At·
, ltitlt for Bcti, H11mburaer Htnl')'. 2U8 tendan1, full time. da_ya.
.---..--..'--'••·=--i rR'f <DOK. 2. Jn t!JIPtf, Plk91tla, Cocta Mot111. 3001 Brl•tol eo.ta Mtu.
.._. 12. hr. CoUlp Cdfee 11 YOUR A.D 1N a.ASS1· SERVTCE .tatm Lut. Man 8'4> • W. -C M. rtEDt &meaM will ~ hill t I m , . EltprrtC'ftefd
WJlllll rt § D taT Dlmat • llM ---b I. Dial ec.sm. Ov~ 2'\. 49D E 17111 5t. CM
• J '
lTIBmOll
YOlM& Mii
11 •• 28
It you've ~ ~ em-
1 ployml'nt btoczluse )'OQ were
too young, or have bad to
M>tlle ror a position that
dori. oot pay 'fell. conaider
this rarr nppol'f\llllt)'.
$3.33 hour.
This "ttk our corporation
"111 employ a conscleoc>
ICXIS }oung man to help out
on a full ome basis In our
mttchand1sing department.
Work whPrr youth is an »
v11nwi;:e. Rrct>1ve complete
tramlni.: nnd lop pay with
no prohlrm~ of strikH. lay•
offs Nr Exrcllcnt over-
11 mr •'1•Porlunlly with un-
l1m11rn 1ulvanrement.
for pr1'1'0nal Interview
Call ~tr. Mattson
.i19-llll.1 brtw 9-2 P.M.
ARCHITKTURAL
SENIOR
DRAFTSMAN
Thl'M' years experi~.
Permanent employment.
Exceptional growth op-
porturu ty 1 o r qualified
person'
Ul!O, ~on cord
bomt, oo ~. Mutt be
attrac1tve. Cood at P.R.
(le. Mmburwd> . NIW.-OIT
Pert0nnel Afency
133 ~.Dr •• N.B.
6424170
Help Wente4
Women 7400
\
Sflfisflal Typist
F o r Comulting Engi-
neen' oalce In Newport
8"cb.
Phone MT. Andrew•
67$.3551
SALESLADY
Nl'W operunc tor new product
for 3 w~n over 25. Mul!t
b a v e pleuant recording
voice. Car nece!!SBry AYt'r-
age $600 mo. For appoint·
mrnt Cail Mr. Farnham
847~26 10 AM-4. 30 PM .
CNTELUGENT Active im·
prOYis~ i.dy to supply 50-
100 people ea mo tor mkt
res...ardl/new product con-
cept. Interviews foc-next 6-
10 mo. ~ retainer le
lot., of run.
494-9707 ~7 pm
EXPERIENCED &c licensed
llhampoo fiJi, for exclusive
Salon ln Fuhloo Island,
Newport Bc1ch, C a I I
644-1484 or &14-2151 Mon
thru Sat. 9 to 6. ••
Au.mbfy fr•inees
Day A: Night Shilt
No exp nee.
Ma~ Yactits
1665 Beboock, C.M.
SeCrelaries
,Typists
Actg Clerks
IMMEDIATE . . . Sborl .It
~ term Hlipmmt.L
Santa AN. NeWl)Ort Beach
le Coata Meta Area.a.
EMPLOYERS
OVERLOAD
tntttView1 Wedneaday oal.)t.
April 17th, 9-S.
Newport Beach 642-«>16
2043 WestcJlff Dr • Suite 204
AmMBlY
OPERATORS
6 montl\a factory experi.
ence: Electronics a.s.sem.
bly.
Contact: Luke Wood
3324 W. Warner
Santa Ana
COLUNS
RADIO CO.
SECRETARY
!bortbMd 100, typi.nf 60.
j((OllfS
PAYAllE
Clfll
Minimum two ~an e&·
petmc.. l~key ~
cakulator and ll1ht typ-
ing.
EIPEDITOI
Responsible Job for .YOWi&
draft exmipt ma.n. Train-
ee poaibon.
Some 'xpcrlence nec--
essary. Permanent posi..
tion.
MASTBt
SPECIAlTIES CO.
1640 Monrovi• Ave.
Cost• Mesa
642-2427
An equal onortunit,y
employer
FURNITURE
Returned from
dtcorator 1tvdlot
Spanleh MMiwnneen
ALL HEW
Must S..Crffke $615
WAS ORIG. $1'98.
ITEMS AS FOLLOWS:
Gor&eous 8 ft. Spa.nlsh IOla
and M a t c h l n a Chair.
Custom q u I I t e d wl&i
carved wood trim-R. 10 tL
Sevtlle Caned velvet 11>ta.
heavy Dart< oat end tablt>S
a{ld ma tctuna cocktllll ta·
~. 8 Piece Klna me Med-
lternnean OU panelled
bedroom llllte with tuU
Kina aue t>oX spnngs &
mattress. Larre Spani..b de-
cor dining room. Gold teal
Spanish table lamps. Hang-
ing swag iamps, etc., etc.
Each piece can be purchu-
ed individually.
Terms available
Newcomen to Calif.
<'recht apvrovt'd lmmrdi11lrly
R & D FURNnuRE
1844 Newport Blvd., C.M.
Every night 'til 9
Sat It Sun 'til 6
BAKER furn., 1930; 6' Hep-
plewhite sideboard S400:
din. tble. U8"X42", $350;
Chippendale chairs, 7 side &
Loni manuf1cturer hH 1 arm, S6.'i0; 2 leather arm
chairs cg0ld I S75 each. lmmecfl•te openings for: 673--0379
Sora.b;d,-ch_e_rry_d.uµn __ i:_set_.
• EJectfOftiC cofftt 8c end tabll'S, chain. Assemblers Rotary mowPr. WooJ n.1g.
Mi!IC. ~S!MIO
• Wiremen or
Women Office Furniture 8010
Wal.nut delk. ~·. $55.
ptAHO I OltGAN
"SIU·IN"
Yes, q'tt i.v111& a "Sen.
tn" b" ~ Floor ~
eJa. .,,_ ~ tradt-llw
of piano. a oriana ww io
at tbele low ~ WHY
DON'T YOO lhop '1tl bf'fore
you~!
WAR.D'S BAl.OWIN STUDIO
1801 Newport, CM 6'lU4114
~OS l ORGANS •
• t..ariest •lock In So. \.ai.t. * 20%-40'ro otr-P1"yer p111\l.l!C
1000 rolls to chouu lrnm I * Term• • Tertna ·Terms •
cub for your piano or tnsr.e
grand piano for new aplnet
Field's Wholesale Plano C.o
12072 Btookburlt at O\apmxn
Garden Grove 17141 63&-2770
ORGANS le PtANns -
Hammond M -100 1 p I n et,
used, only $895; RIM ~
Baldwin, Conn, L o w r ~ >
from $395. Lo t a ol u'IC(J
grands, spinets It coo~r
pianos. •
SCHMIDT-PllILLJPS CO.
1907 N. MB.111, Santa Ana 1 PIANOS l -ORGANS-
ALL MAJOR BRANDS,
NEW' USED
W AU..JOl'S.MANNlNG'S
MUSIC CITY
3400 So. Briatol
So. Coast Plaza
510-2165
Wurlitzer Spinet piano, lull
keyboard, like new. Best
otier. • 67>297.J
e HAMMOND Chord Organ
/Walnut) ADULT OWNED
Pvt Ply S300 c11ll 546-62'29
83 Hamond Organ
with Leslie tpeakera
Excel cond. ~
I
Good opportunlt,y for We •re •n ett•bUthed Sewin" machine nn•>Y•ton, .1..... n••t ......... --""
Walnut swivel chair. $15. PRIVA'PE ~ wanta to
2 side arm chalnt, $2.5. bey plano for cash. SU.93.15
Apply in person
Willud Jord•n
Architect & Auocl•tea
1500 Adams, Coit& Mesa .. -,,,_.---.-.. ~ ,,,_..._, commerd•I f1rm with Spartswear, 1<>me ll)inees perlOR&ble )'OWlg lady.
beinr arcepted. Apply 2907 Excellent working cond1-llber•J frl~ benefits.
Good ctmd. 64&-Ql63 eves. '
J. W. Robinson S. Oak St .. Sant.a Ana, 7:30 tJons and employee Ilene-Only people with at
to 3: 30. tits. Phone Pel'10Mel De-IH1t six months ex·
Offlc-. E uipment I011 T_e_a._v_l1_ion ____ 120_5
q RENT OR IUY
£XPER Steno .It p B x pertment for appoint-perlence should •pply (3) FiJlL keyboard NCR
.1 ...... 1~ add.Ing macbioes ~~~•LeR'" hit OfMftintt for:-opera.toe lor lron•-oflice '--men . -- --ti ----SlOO each.. call J o h n desk m Motor Hotel in 6 73·3130 LM,ima BHcb. (714> 494-Kingsbury 644-1700 Ext
416, 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon· *JANITORS
Full time
Excellent benefits
Apply Personnel
lf>..I. Mon. thru Fri.
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
An equal opportunity
employt>r
BORED &
TIRED
-
o! watching T.V. ev~
nings betwt't'n 6 &: 10
p.m. &: v.iould rather
WOTk le earn a weekly
salary of
$72.50
MR. ABRAMS 'n4-~
TIRE CHANGER
Pmnanent position. Mini-
mum age 18. Must be bond-
11 h I P. Experienced P!'t'-
ferrrd. Lincral salary &
company benefits. Apply
in person.
FIRESTONE STORES
475 E. 17th St.
COSTA MESA
No Experience
Necessary!
Must have clean Califomla
driving record. Apply
4563
E X PE R I E N C E D Apt
manager. 34 unita. 2 pools,
no maint. Free rent & $45
mo. 1998 Maplt' SI. CM. Call
Irwin 213: 856-0781
RN. PART-TIME, 3 to 11 &
ll lo 7 shifts. Excellent
salary & benefits. Parle Lido
Coo•alescent Center 466
nagship Rd. NB 64-1-8044
WANTED RN's for relief 3
to ll A lJ to 7. Apply
Huntington V a I I e y Con-
valescent Hosp., 8 3 8 2
Newman, HB.
BARMAIDS ....
.. and GO.GO
DANCERS
S300 per week
838-5483 Cir 633-91'6:t
OPERATORS
Sportswear. Experienced.
Steady. S80 -$140. 1580
Monrovia. N.B. 642·2666.
LADY, live in 1 lo l mont~.
10 assisl in bsehold dutiel! &
ell.rt' chJdm. New baby ar-
riving. 540-7265
EXP ERIENCE D
WORKROOM help. M e I
l\1~on Draperies.
54&-2035
NEED 2 Fullerettes. Can
ram S4. hour. we train.
H.B. Mn. G re e n b e r g
1141-J;;25
NEED Immediately, babysit·
ler. part-time In my home.
2 School age girls; near
HOllJC Hosp. Ref. 642..sJ.29
WANTED h1dy to live-in.
room It hoe.rd + amall
aalary. 2 Q\ildren 9, 11.
968-1640
YELLOW CA.B CO. HOUSEKEEPER, exp only,
1116 E. 16th St. live in, rP(s req. l adult~. 2
Costa Mesa I e e n 11 ii c r a . Udo Isle
--P-ART TIME--sn-1t.:;.1R
OJ>l'll~ for Bridal Coun.'14'1· DO Ntrr Shop Wo~. No exp.
Of'1. 3 eves per wa-k It 4 Ile('. 2:>-1.'l EArfy a.m. dillt.
ho\11'!1 Sat. Average $60 per Mr. Oooul 135 E. 171h St.,
wrM<. M~I be well groom. ".:c,...._M,,,,,. =.,-------
rd & over 21. 8.16-7479 PA RT-TIME Experienced
FULL Timt servire station DouJthnut mater. A P P I Y
hrlp: ni,ghlll, Must be OVf'T Dolly o· Dou&hnut. 9148 Brookhural. HB. :S yrs. old & exJ)t'ricnct'd In
mrchanir11. Refer. 642-4142
-Reil E•t•te S•l"m•n
WANTED. We wUI train. Call
\'1llage Real Est.lite
9624 m or 546-3103
MAKE SJ per hr Riling
f'UJ.ler Brush 1n YoUr tPUe
lifTl", 96'l-37ml
WOMEN ealJ\ $50, lS hours
w~k as 11. 'f'ofterette. Mn..
Brown. 342·1'8!11t.
An equal opportunity
employer
Experienced
T•Uers
N C R Operator
Bank of America
1016 Irvine
Newport a .. ch
An equal opportunity
crnployPr
A11lst•nt BookkHper
Age 25 to 38. Experienced
in payroll, 2 years experi-
Pnce 11ccounts receivable.
Type 55 wpm, good rt'fer-
enres required. To S2.50
hour
Send 11.'tter or qualifications
lo H.M.F. P.O. Box ntS,
Newport Bl.'ach.
HEAD ltOSTESS
Apply Miss Huffm•n
Howard Johmon' s
2750 H.,bor Blvd.
Cott• Mes•
546-6592
--SEC-RET ARY
Modem 2-girl oUice In Cor·
ona del Mar. lmmedlale
oprnlna available ror unus-
ually competent, lharp, e'C·
pcrlenced girl. Pleasant
phone penionality. Muat be
exceptional typist -at least
80 wpm. No S/H. Use dkta-
phonc. Aste Z1 to 40. U quaJ.
illed, caU 673-7688
~----~~-~-WAITRWES
PARAMETRICS
929 Baker Street
Cost• Meu
549.2221
day tbru Saturd1y ·-TV
Ger•ge Sele """
CONSOLE TV $28. Office
desk, retin S48: Frigidaire,
M-A--11.1 ............ R.Z..,.r.--p=-e-rson--to-w-ork~in-1 top fnr', sep dr S50: Singl
accounting office. Require dr. rcfrig. cross-top frttu-r
UM' of 10 key adder & $40. Lolli more! 1560 Super-
tYJIE'Wl"iter. Know~e of ior lresrl C.M. 61&-9188,
bookkeeping betplul but not 642-5666.
l'l.'quired. Wl1J1ng to train. F=--:-U'RN::o----ITIJR.E=--.-A-ppl-:-1an-cea-.
Wnte M 89 Dally Pilot. miscelJanrous llotacwarell.
MEN It women 10 circulate Moving. 869 Congress, CM
popu.la r pet it IOll. Must be 646-5641
regislered voter ol Orange ========;;:;.
County. Good pay. lnCJuire Furniture Auction 1025 at 1005 E. 17th St., Room
1
________ _
212. Sanla Ana or pbone
83f>.6.336, 89US87
EXPER Fry cook. FuUtime
full.yr. 7 am-3:30 'Pm Ben-
ton's C«fee Shop 133 S
Coast Hy, Laguna
School .. ln1trudion 7600
IBM KEYPUNCH
360 PROGRAMMING
INDUS. DRAFTING
GROC. CHECKING
' 'TrtOHIC ASSEMIL Y
PBX/TYP
Fumlture .••
••. Appflances
Color TV's &
Stereos
AUCTION
Wednesd•y -6 p.m.
INSPECT ANYTIME
9 A.M. · 9 P.M.
Alw•y• •
TREMENDOUS
SELECTION
of TOP Quality
FREE
1 yr. Pam & Labor
$1 M•.
No Dep•sit
Rent ·With
Or'tion to Buy
521-7555
R ~NT
CO,OR TV
S9 MONTH
Rental can apply to purchase
ORDER BY PHONE
523-3651
9 to 9:30 -7 DAYS
Low boys, consoles. portables
$29.9S West Coast
Trade &: Bustneu Schoo1a
Dtvlsion of
Computing 8t Software Inc.
New & UMd AND UP
Furniture & Appli•nces I No Money Down
WtLUS CLARJ<"S OAC Huntington Beach AOK U.00 per wk. bu.y lease plan.
Newporter TV S..les 536-8885 1
2027 Harbor Blvd CM 54Wfill.
COMMISSION CALLERY RCA COLOR TV 120Z!~a;!~~g 8:hroG.G. 7722 (Used) $150
Education" G•rden Grove Blvd. BIG 267" SCREEN
----,FOR, 1n Blk !.~~tGBeech ~ Fully Gu•nnteedCM.
S.Cret.rl•I Tr .. nlnt at the.,........,., rove• ·-:r· lln H•rbor Blvd.,
ATTEND mE Open tll ' p.m.
Most Modern Up-to.Date Appfl•ncat 8100
BUSlNE.SS COLLEGE in the HI-Fi & Stereo 1210
f..'xJ>frienced only! Southland. The achoo1 of NEW GAS S$lDIRIYER 1968 SOLID State 4-apeed
Ann• .. In Penon Programmed Laming with WA Stereo. Beautiful ~. ,..,,~ the "flnl•"'-school" touch. 2 Left •t S 149 C•sh SURF & SIRLOIN ..... ,. Lett on layaway. Pay bals:n
5930 P C t H Complete Secretarial -OR ce ol $79.35 or amaJ
IC. 1 · wy. Bl"l1shup -IBM t<Lypuncb. P•ymenh of $1.N Wk. ....---.ti. "'--'It n-.., Newport le~h M-.. -ET-..,· ......, .. ~.. '"""""' ""'"" Start any uuu•Y-~ 1377 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 53S-7289, Anaheim S EC R E:I' ARY -Bookk~r classes tao. Open tU 9 p.m.
for dental office. Requires POLL y PRIEST REFRIGERATOR inretllgen~. Initiative Ir BUSINESS COu.EGE NEW HOTPOINT
ple11s.iint personality. DentAl Bl N B
@lC'J)eT. no ft!lenlial Wri~ 32S N. Newport .. . . Larie 2-Dr Auto Deb'09t
l220
ROBERTS CAKAI> 7 7 0
CroMCielcl stereo. Ear -e -LANDSCAPING e
~-1171\ IH-t 5:30 & 6:30 p.m.
r/o Daily Plloc Box M86. Phone 543-9723 n99 CASH
BABYSmrn 2:J> to a::iO CHRlS1lAN Woman I 0 UFETIME Gttt. Oillcoet 10 OR
Mon thru Fri my home bebyilt on Wed It Sun eves ldlDrl 1')'pinc School 113 Del Mlle Payments ol $2 Week
phona I.net. Xlnt cond. $250
675-M98 aft s.
Cotta Met.:11 7>4S-«7l2 In the nunery of Central Mar, Of. 548-2859 Me»-Wed. 1377 Harbor Bl•d • C.M. Mlscell•neous 8600
Aoencles, Women 7300 LADY, wtth n1r. for .um.mer Blble OluJ'ch. CM 548-4567 • SEWING • --~ tll 9 p.m. -
child Clll'r: Udo 1*. ~=--:-:---.,.---.,-,:-DESIGN " PATl'ER.NS RENT OR IUY PlANO Upr11tht -blond St•t Ty.Jst $325 67' -LADY, with car, for child Coa New automatic asher SllO. Portable ..,_writer I"' ........... can!. 11Iteirt1001W1 at 3; oc-~Ogle St., ta Mna .., W-k .,..,. Ar<'UrAte typist with A·l per. ---~ ~" S2S. Ask for M • r I e n ' !ll}nal\ty to work In p~uant ~~nw;!::sa~p ~~ :. t:':11e ~rrn\chts. MERCHANDISE fOtt COLOR KING TV 646--0652 or 5~7231 ~~ Clk $350 Newport Blvd.. N.B. ruu,.nroe window girl _s_A._L_E_AN_D_TaA __ D.!_ S39-9~~EN7 DA~1031 ~~O~G ~~~~~~
Sharp, neat, '"P't'· Wortc In EXPERfDllCED I> a k et Y ,.....,,Drl1 ~~ !_~U nt Fumltu,.. IOOO WASHERS $29.95: ch-yen Fl'ft Ht, del. p1r'--u-.. 'lU
plush hotel with fadnatlnir aa.lts lady nt'('(kd. t'ull time ....., .,...,. •·JV • A.M. Main. HB "&my" ~i-,.1;•m altemoons Call '73-11116 • 57Ullli) • SP .&NISH $35; ~ S15; R.etrtc .. atm011phl'rf'. ~ .._... A G KlR8 lkpr. (part time) EXI'ERTENCED Beaatidan POST..po!Jo mother Deedt cop,......one a Yoe.; aar. y va.cuum ctrani nrll
wantf'd. Balboe a.1 Club nul'l!e-~. Live-In. Call From SMfl.PSLhowrootnES 541}.1~ lttlc:lurit'flt~. B1ln.,c .. ll"•I '", 1
S2.50 Hour &auty Salon. ~ alt 4 p.m. 64&-SHl AM CAS STOVE or small paymrrt' ' Mr11I ~ltloo Cor rigtll srlrt. LMnt Room Set Apt •Ire 132.50 Dept KE ~7'~. A'l •11
W'lrk a"f"MlC)Orul. f'Oft PUBLJC 8TC"O-1 ONLTI OU wood-tarried 642.(Q 8"'" C j e UNIQUI e rood typist lleeded. Jobt Men, Wom. 7500 erms. D-S)tt, NOW 11.99, •n1"1 • m c r a, pro (.'('l'lr
fll11C!C'mmt A2rncy 646-"4&1 ·-lights It IJ)llrer. StOO n•d ~~ Park, CM, ~l MEDICAL Asa:tatant b • ( k FORllGH 5-Pc 0.nette s.t Anttqu.s 1110 Ship! bell 125, 140 & 20th Mo .. than 1---.... ea • 1 ONLY. CM)c.tvp lw>xqoo -St . C.M."
office elfPf'r. )(rap A lllJtt· n'Job ~~;·C«r; ext~ table w/4 wmu.«bt WANTED flOt CASH N"'=£=7N:::---=nec-~-.. -1M-. --,-t>n-e---,kf~ll.S
Uon. Salary ot>tft. 83?.7~ lt'I OK. Write P.O. b 2217. lf'Oft cft81nt. blade or •llOC• OR ON CONSIGNMENT ~ ~e. COit S'UO Takr
C•rMrt fer Secya. & Ba~lltter, my holllt-, 5 days Orange, Di67. do. -.s&. Anttqu~ Pl«ft 6 l&O. ~3171
lkprt. In Orange Ceunty ~ l ~~~~ H~ C~WTt>. MaJl\t WJOrk, A ~!.:P~~~r~ tW~ 1 Art !:~~ GENUINE Mfftr'a Manx...,_"""-'
-w -----~-.... ---·-I..,., m' Bea 1229ig .NOW .Au.ct1QN & CUftlal _11Gta7_ l perts. Nenr \lted, ~
...,-.. Mtail. 8atlf7' + 1'11--Mtr.I& "6rLY ... J5' ,. .. --.... v .l-w \AU.~ I · •• ---~ Pamtl)' oti. 3 paiot p::ar;.., ""u·coo·s ........... 01..-..i..1. ""' ... • _,,,_i., ---11111 ~ -901-0C..« .. ·---~ -.... .._ w1t • ,.._ ___,,...._. ,, Stock on bull OKLY~ ttiru SUNDA.X.-APRA. .:&II IOa4 -1'Ma-Cl.OWN
•:r-• 12 hr,.._ Slllc+Jonc PiUo P11.Jtr NO DOWN PAYMENT ,_. Milnal«I! • W. CA1L: <Mdrtn'• ,.,..._.Mqle Se. 8etl1 8r'*'8 at mi66 lxec
A;nlcy tor c.tter C1't1
410 W. Cod Jlw)t , N.8
By .ppoll\1-~
ffOOSFJC!:Epm_ iift "" 1 can IC-Jill lot..... J • ..,.. l'vmttvr. 531-1212 8Gli5 Show, '""" BaDoau m.u> ~.cm Udo late, Ol1J. to 5 • R&!TAURANT HELP • Rec. mT tor 12115.15 . (2JJJ 588-3.UJ. A• tar ..... , .. MAD A tfDld to rather ---~---•PART·TUll: •-TrrmsuJowun!Kftdt Cat&IOl\llncmd.IAadlltL .... ,.. ............ PART TIMI MAJD • S6al • I Apprewtd ,wnlture A.ote all ~ tw eaa 'Ifft.II e 548-2121 e COOR ,-.IJted ,_ aut ~I 7W llarl)or &Jvd., CM. Commf .. Min G .. leriet 0 1.us.i Ada. Dta1 1G«11
Olil1 Pilot •-.... I atat~ r'Nlrt Call na: r 0.IJy N , 1~ ~ Tm G•n1en C"°" llYd. todql
AIWs.JI • c;..ooc ~ or S3:>4ll I • M9-.-• ~ --"'--OIARGE==-=~m,,,..... __
)ll r --1130 -N
lJDIIJ
!4484
IS t
ra1.1.
1lanu.~
""' ns It
tl'1U'll'
1p!net
) Co
i)mJln
l-2770
11 et,
~
r «' >
used ~soJe 1
:::o.
Ina
~s
>s.
:rs
full
Best
~2973
lrgan
NED
2'J9
l205
y
R
r
I
m
lan.
ts
1511
.M.
t10 -eed
Ille.
a:n-
Wl
pt.,
20
10
8f
IS().
00
nd,
er. n ,.
• 2 ,.,\
n:;
'J):i
n''I 1'1 '.
"'t kr
'
ill>
.tEltCHA"DISI FOR PITS Md LIVESTOCK 'T1tANSP04tTATION TRAHSPOaTATION TllAHSPORTATIOH TRANSPORTATION
SALi ANO T'RADI -----· --------------------------------...._, General -IMt Slip Mootfnt 9036 Im ........... Aut.. HOO ,,......... Auto. 9'00 VMd Can 9900 MlsctU•neout 1600 -~ •
SCIAI LETS MAi:t ~ a;:.:·~::;" DA'ISUN YOLISWAGIN
• ~ ..,.ume Weil malbt.ioed. Space avail 'i'l Datsun, P /S, rad.lo a
S E ..._ 25' to 85'. 64HT35 mirrors. $49 dtll. aasume ~ AN W IS o.ea em 9100 CUJtrllct be!. ean nn pvt
GIRMAN SHIPHlllD MoMl9 "--pty. Dir. OHTTl Un~ck -Depot -Booey -PUPS
!ZJtber -TAKE me OUT '1'ftUI FACEL VEGA I MY wUe compla.ina about AKC ~ ~ .... 24 Wide llhe old fllm.a Oft TV. "I A W .,,,_,., ~~
ttiat picture,'' lhe told m. 1. Cl. ULK WIKJNG-T .. leth * Tw. ledrm
'ttie other ni&bt. "'"¥ a.ck Bl»r Sell m B1:Aal TiLR. IUPPLY ··--' T•.,..... Top WloaiDc ...,._. 11111 8-da Bltd. ~~~~ .. you ._. to ~ me ol all Tllw Rmff.,.... a..s l1Nl1J
%. Qi. HOR.DRMK
·r.o r. v. · 'Oa.uic" Ra.rel
Xlnt lnvatmt A ear to
restore. Oab' 28,<m ml.
Rolls int. air. Loaded:
Needs paint • t1rn. $11'00
• otter. 494-4701 .
POOL TAILlS ot3~~
i;1 1908 8RUNSW1C:X C:O.lt Victor noo ====== JAGUAR .., AMF tt1 11UANGLE Mu..l'emalel (.5 weeka)
Slate from $39 n•--'-T c Bl'Ulll'wick $329 value • • ...,.. 6: 111 lbota)
UNLY $D UI BRED J'OR QUALITY
tOO'I'. FINAN'CING A TEMPERAM!NT
SECAllD POOL tied!.:=-~;: Aute T•la & ..... M10
323 ~. lll&in, Ofl.llP 831-31165Eves aft1:30 PM Ail' OD.....-, to llO PSI.
5.1i-lm AKC Re&. Mm. Poodle ~ la9. ~tank;,_.. A
-SPANISH ciwn-pies. s WU. 1 Ooal black. 1 Pftl9 nttda. $110. ~
2 door· cuatom uiJlde ·low · ~~ ~ ~ Tr.ater, Ttevel 19425 '6J JAGUAR XIE suitable-tor Jampa • u end Su.. Av _ __.__.__
. uOD e. "~· u· SCAD........... ..... .. ta b le or DF.CORATOR Mother a Father an at nuvu&, ...,... ••
PIECE Removable Marble Nidence. l9'f-I095 equip. w I stove, llak, Ice-
top, dart Oak with gold e -.,..MIN.,,,,..,.. -DA,...,...,CRSHUNDS,..__ __ . --box 6: lide attacblble fmt,
sign. OU landlcapes, various ~ 2 mala left. Uled once! 962-QSl
item. too numeroaa list 7~ AKC _ _._.. -
Iris, Corona del Mar m.ms ;-.&;-. NCh
alt 6 p.m. All~ ~Ev,. """Rus.!IAN=~=-wolf'""':":""-MUDd,-__,,..__,.,..~
wkeoda. 711 * AUCTION * -:!t..be:!° ::_ ~~
il you wUl MD or bQJ PUREBRED J.Jr BuenJ1. 1
iiVt WJnQ a try yr, fem, barldm. G d
Auctiom Friday 1 p.m. dlapoatlon ~ t to 5
Windy's Auction Bem BOXER PUPS. AKC
~bindTOIO"a Bldc.Mat1 4Mm3 31115~ Newport, CM M&-Rl>afly -,.,..,,...,,..t-_L__,,_w_eekenda-..,,.,,..-,-~-
Trucb 9500
Coope. Uke brand
Om>me wire wheel.a.
new.
$4695
STANSBURY
IUICK.
2100 HARIOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 646-9022
MERCEDES BENZ
TM M~t be.t thlnt
fe • MW C•rt
•wed c.r with
a 100% fHr•fttM.
EYt17 major woJtinc put•
Is auaranteed 100% for ~
~ or 1000 mil~. Whlcb-
w.-COIDll tint. So u dUl'-
lnl Im time an.Ytbini ao-
Wl'Olll with any of tbne
puts, we'U repair or re-
place lt free.
For lutance:
• ellliDe • transmluion •
rear axle • front axle auem-
blle.t • 1nke l)'ltem •
eleetrica1 ~stem
RUDY TO 60
OVER 70
VOLICSWAGENS
TO CHOOSI ROM
LAI.UT SR!CTION
IN OIANGI COUNTY
549-0303 -673-lltO
'57 CieY 2 dt ............ $99
'59 Pontiac 4 dt ..•••••• $199
'61 Rambler American • $299
'59 T ·Bird , .......... · •• $399
'61 "F"'S5 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $499
TRANSPORTATION
100% Financing Available
Also we carry our own
COl)tract.I
$49 to $499
NEWPORTER MOTORS
2036 Harbol' BIVd 548-5294
NEED A CAltt
CAN'T BE 1'1NANCEDT
eBankruptT e RepcmeltlfonT •Bad CredltT • Divorced?
•Military e New ID Area?
Make Payday Payment.I
McCARTHY MOTORS
1420 So. Main 6: Edlnaer
(2 blocks N. cl Sean)
Santa Ana Pb $0-350'1
9900 UMd Cera
CADILLAC
NABERS
~l-==M=E=Rc=u=R=,=-
'64 MEICURY 2600 HARBOR8LVI>.
CX>L0NY PARK STA. WAG. -========1 fictory air • Full power CHEVROLET incl s.way power 1eet
COSTA MES.A 54N!OO
'66 CHEVROLET
4 Door. V8, automatic t:reJl8.
milsion, power atHrlnr. ra·
TuUp cream e:rtertor wltb
black viayl Interior. Alwa.YI
len'bd at JdlnlOft I: San.
!Wduoed lo $18!115.00 fllD
price.
JOHNSON & SON
Uncol~Mm:ury
Costa M~ Branch
19'1 Harbor mw. 642-1Ui0
'65 Mac Mont, 4 cir, one
owner, MR, air, pb, pa,
xlnt cond, Pvt pCy, $1485
See at 254t Newprt mvd
CM
dlo, heater, factory Iii' cm· ========
dltioning.
$1795
STANSBURY
BUICK
MUSTANG
1966 SHARP Munang w/aJr,
pwr, auto, Muat aell. $1900.
Call 962-8229 att 3 p.m.
2100 HARBOR ILVD. OLDSMOllLE ss CASH $$ AKC Reg. German Shepherd
pupa. Champion aired. 6
We P8J' cub for: WU. Shots. t.50 up. 549-1296
DEMOllSllATOR
1967 GMC %·TON 1m KAlllllOlt 14.VO, COSTA MISA --------COSTA MESA 646-9022 -------
1 Fumitur• "Appliances -------'62 Volkswagen I Antiques </ Tool.I Afghan puppies 4 wlcs old camper Crui9er Pickup buck
ON ITEM_ or _ AKC, black masked, silver Automatic t:ransmiuion. ra· Must aell, $795 or best otter.
COMPLETE HOUSEFUL. & platinum. . 675-ll32 dio and beater, power steer-======== Pbone 642-4980 il no ans try MG again. Call 547~48 or 827-8271 Horses 1830 tnr. heavy dutY rubber. -,6-"7 """eam_pe_r ""'w"""e-stl-=-ali"'"'a-..,..24,....,.000..,..,
POOL TABLES $3195 MGB 1965 -Must sell! ml rack. radio. $ 2 3 5 0 RF.G. QUARTER HORSES: 536-1019 ""'P NAMES' ... 11~11 .. " kl Goin& to N.Y. Xlnt cond. ~-------fro:U'£~. sf2. zn:mth ;~~7"b;i'ter~i:'3 ~-STAHSIURI Wire wheela,lfAH-:-$1695. or '59 VW, new eng., 3,000 mU-
Brunswick, Delta, l'iaber, old gelding, top pleasure It BUICK olfer. 833-1234 Ext. 306 er ec. $695. Leaving state. Xlnt
26 mod. Slate bed. w/ life-perl t xlnt 675-3846 cond. 54&-1~ Eves.
time guar. BADGER, brood~·:r~ ~~ ~QHA 2100 HARBOR BLVD. '63 MG Midget, like new. $43 -========
407 S. Main, Orance 533-0311 champ. geritle to ride. Pr» COSTA MESA 646-9022 del, assume contract bal. VOLVO
WE BUY & SELL ed from $500. Must aell, '57 PICKUP, Hemi motor, Can tin pvt pty. Dlr --------
• Diemonch • Gold 642--0981 days or S40-9S2S De Soto '68 Uc. •moc dev, et-mi '68'/J VOLVO
Antique & Old Jewelry eves. mlrron, R&H. $100 or ofter. '52 MG TD "Oaasle" JWtrd, NOW HEREI
Almost anythl.nr. TRADES. Call BW 642-8249 Xlnt mech & rung cond, Br, SEE THEM TODAY C. M. Jewelry & Loen Livestock IMO .65 Ford Pickup, new bn.kes, Rae Gm, nu upb1, rad, $950
IUICK
'68 BUKK
* ''Thrifty· Wise" *Luxury Compact
1986 CHEVY n CLUB CPE. '63 OLDS F-85 ''a.1'n..ASS"
Hi·Thrlft 120 hp. SIX w/std. 2 di' HDTOP S~RT CPE.
Shirt, R/H. CCboioe new car Outstanding orig. Ro Ya I
trade. in w I Ju 1 t 37,119 Maroon w I Ermine Whlt.e
rnilel! ) Spark1ing orir. llJ. top, plush white vinyl boo-
ver blue. A smut money ket 1e&t Inter. 1in10,<ml
1>uy in-a ~ ~know _ ONLX .... $1095 -·-
value!" 1st csr Jot on Harbor Blvd.
ONLY $10951 JOHNSON & SON
1st car lot on Harbor Blvd. Lincoln-Mercury
JOHNSON & SON ea.ta Mesa Branch
Lincoln-Mercury 00 Harbor IDvd. 642-'l<riO
Sport wagon. V8, automatic:, Costa Mesa 8ranch '66 TORONADO
power steering, radio and lMl Harbor mvd. 642-'l<riO Low Mileage. &.oti!ut gold
helter. 8,000 miles. '62 CHEV with blX'k leather b*rlfr.
rack al Ud box Pvt pCy 673-00.S 1838 Newport Blvd., C.M. GOOD BARLEY HAY. lumber , met · e 646-7741 e $1.25 per bail. AM IF M rad. $12 0 0 .
~5623 54.5-5107 DISHWASHER
NEW HOTPOINT
SAVE $50
OPEL
$4195 Fully e q u i pp e d • Will
4 Speed Spyder. Rad.lo, Heat-..crUkle. Private Ollfl'lf:I'.
L • er. MUST SELL! Dir. Can be seen at 18T7 fall UOiA STANSBURY $130.00 HAP.80R BLVD .. C.M.
IMPORTS BUICK Phone: 842·6608 • ~ • --------'65 FORD F.coOOUne, 6 cyl.,
TRANSPORTATION stand. 1hi!t: nix;o; eoo<J
Built-in or used u portable.
S140 or pmt.s of -
$2.SO WEEK
9000 condition. 646-839'2 Eve/wk· Bolts & Y1cht1 end.
--------1 '62 OLDS F~. 4 dr, R&.H, nu 2100 HARBOR BLVD. Help Help auto trane, nu brb, nu
646-9303 COST A MESA 646-9022 Private party baa a nice• ·;::ti.res' =· =B=EA==UTY=·=545-=1334== 1966 Harbor, C.M. 1962 VW and will .t1 for'"
1871 Ha.rbor mvd.. C.M.
Open tJl 9 p.m.
fRIGIDAI.RE wan oven le
cookinJ: top (burners) COP·
PERTONE, perfect-$95
bo:h. 3 section DIVAN $45
M~l'Jle fini!ihed dbl chest
DP.A WERS $35. 546-6229
HERITAGE Walnut dining
room table, wtth 4 black
leather chairs, continental
he~ht. 2 extra leaves,
perfect cond. sacrifice $350.
646-6866
PRIVATE Party ~ for sale
a 19'.M VW. Mullt sell this
week. Good tires, and ckan
11 a pin. Phone 642-4980
anytime
~-------18 Ft "P!'rformer" Cabin '64 International Scout. Must
Cruiael' wtth new '67 95 HP see to Appreciate! Many
"Mercury" outboard t'lJiine. Extras! ns w. Wilson. CM
Hal electric starttt It AJt F4 after 5 PM
'67 OPR
altenat.oc • generator. Twin 1.96J CHEV PU, 6 cyl.. 8'
aide mounted 18 r.al fuel b e d , r a d t o , h e a h r •
tanka. Tilt trailer, 2 t>unk:a, O'Verdrive. $625 (wholesale
bait tank, life jackets. price). 646-2977 alter 6 PM
Turns 34 MPH. G o o d Station wagoo. Radio eel
cruiler. fisher, 1 k I er. Ci.mpers 9520 he9ter.
1~!AB0UT hull, 12· TRANSPORTERS $1795
~C.&6~er~~t ~u~~~~~~~~ll STANSBURY
sunroof, radio BUICK S1ilbo1tt 9010 '67 VW 9 pass
'65 Deluxe Bus 9 pass 12)
LIKE SAILING? '63 Deluxt> Bu11 9 pan 2100 HARBOR BLVD.
e Par;ymeots, high interest, OPEL 1968 Coupe, 563 miles.
Sport Cars 9610
68'/J MG
NOW HEREI
SEE THEM TODAY
.,.PfGA LttDiA
• IMPORTS
1966 Harbor, C.M.
'62 VW Good rubber, good
bC'llkes, very clean interior,
$79;; ca&h. Phone 642-4980.
U no ans. try again
Antiques, Cl1ulcs 9615
1941 roRD 2 Door Sedan. 1
Owner, t'l,000 m i 1 e • •
542-1915 after 3:00 PM
TWrN ~ It mattre91, ex-
cellent $20, coro'less wtD
clock $28. TV comb. 24" AM
l F'M radio $90 Incl records.
612-3458
Dl.SLIKE ~? ~ COSTA MESA 646-9022
depreciation, .Up rectal.I, ft~ -0wnl!l'I change of plans re. cleaning, insu1'1lllce, etc. ~ 0 quires immed aale. $1800·
PREFER THESE?? ' ~ 548-3414 anytime
• Low cost, i° work A " Autos W1nted 9700 ~ :: 1~::!s ~20~ ~,~,_ PORSCH!_ •••••••-WANT to buy military 45 or
9 mm Luger. Reasonable.
64&-7616 or 544-8515
-FILL DIRT WANTED
ad;:; ~I~ fi! 34
· 549-0303 -673-1190 PORSCHE WE PAY
NEWPORT SAILING <LUB "" K~IOlt I LVO. COSTA MUA TO p 67>-0110 '65 v.w. C.amper w/cabana. 'EiO Coupe •~ Laguna Bch 10,000 CY.
496-1840 IRD Fib«' g1 N Xlnt cond. New reblt eng. '59 Coupe. Yellow ~~sets~ aai::'~: =~-~ ~~-·~~=·-s:r: PRICE Good cond. $425. 642-0117 •
Mite. Wint.cl 1610 or 642-3430 CHEVROLET bus cooverted ~ -W--A-N_T_E_D_ ~o~~~~ :~;.Pb"'~~" A~ -
Tho Zone Boat c:o.. Balboa CALIF Camper .tor Ra.nchero .. s FOR NICE CARS
33' RHODES SLOOP or El Camino, icebox, bed " ' ~ AND TRUCKS
$3100 {Days) 6 7 3 -5 0 0 4 ; cabinet. ~9 ' Furnitur..Appliances CEves) 494-8843 Alty Mike or Model.
Color TV'.-Stereos CAL 20 No. 681 lmPort.d Autos 9600 CONNELL 531-121i~L:,3-0555 Like nt'W, many extras. • Spot Ca.ah for Imports 549-0303 -673-1190 CHEVROLET
(Ask for Art) • 673-9109 • We pay more fOT 111)' import 1m HMIOllt I LVO. cosu MUA 2121 Hert.or Blvd.
LOA. ir aleepe 2. motl'. trlr. rqardlna of year. make COST A MESA
FURNITURE Stereo comp! 8 mo1. old. Sell $1950 or or condJtion. Try u& before TOYOTA 546.1203 households. WUI pay cash trade. 842-1529 y o u 1 e 11 . E L M 0 RE
.u., """""" ., .. -91 .. ..,.. Z103 .__,..~..,,.--=:=:--=---:-:---;;-MOTORS, 9625 G a r d e n ~"'"" ...,...._ .,...,. . 16' FALCON "-~6ilu; Ml ,_,_ Grove Blvd JE 1-6630 8700 acce91., ind. outboard
Machinery, etc. xmt conc1. Sli95. 642-{).iSl ALFA ROMEO
1953 FORKLirl' 12' hl,.lo NICE Snowbird. extru. Alao 1 _______ _
mast. Full 4.000 ib lift. $'195. daasy molded wood dinghy '60 ALF A ROMEO
WiU finance. Carpet ram 3.6 motqr S48-~ .Julietta Spyder Roadster
SlOO 639-2691, Res 897-2433 9020 Wbtte. new black .top. _Powe __ r_C_ru_l•_r• ___ Pirelli tires. ni« intenor. Uk>
68112 TOYOTA
NOW HEREI
SEE THIEM TODAY
.ltullADW
• IHPORTS
FREE TO YOU 35' ELCO trunk c a b In JE 7.&509. U oo amwer,
cruller, xlnt runn1ni cand. ~. 1966 Harbor, C.K. &48-m
MEDIVM Size male doc· New can•u encl. tor after-======== TOYOTA Redish brown • ~ 2 deck. _... UI>hol • radio. AUSnN HEALEY
yrs. nice dltpoaition fll· Belt oiler. 613-47116 eves.
fectlonate prefer adults 386 '62 AUSTIN Healey, wire HEADQUARTERS ~r Apt A. a.ta !p1td Sid &om 9030 wble .. o'drive, 4 seater: new ELMORE
M8& 4118 16, WHITE Star w/191'1 tires, tonneao A top; xlnt
l YEAR old Blade 6: white Mm: llOO eng . xtnt cood. cond. l"IMftdng nail. $1200 9625 GARDEN GROVE BLVD
cock+900 (female) 2 bl4iclt ~t: trailer.A loh o1 ex. 968-322'1 CARDEN GROVE JE 1~
rabbits (male I: female) 223 tru. S1800 Comp I et e . 1959 Auattn Healey ~ '66 TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr.,
C.lbft'tne Place, C.ll. After ~ $7915. MechanJcally toP rlh, w/w, at.wf. tnuw .. WS PAY · · •
l PM 4113 80S'lQl Whaler: 50 bp .... * 549-1556 SW5. Orig. awnr ~ CASH
Fl'!'e to Jood llDme., AKC Merab, 1rlr. ~ Guard COITINA
male stcye terrier, 5 yra. appr. 1J.ke MW J151». LA " YOLICSWAGEN Aduli. or older ch11dren 5-G5U
onl.Y • ....._ • 4/16 ========-'81 Ford Cortina GT, RAH 4 ,67 SED. white. bit. Int. na-for med cara 6 ~ Jutl
MtXEI) beqle. Female. 10 903'2 ·~ s;_~,...,..:t.ee. dlo, titted COYer, *1 rack, uU •T tor b'te tltimate,
-n ......., 111bota. ~ ll R SJ ' ____:_ -~~' 9 mo
,,..._ ...... 4,.,.. ' .-":» 9100 Ml JllMI. e1>IIS7liii:~-v~~~ e-~jiin~~fiijiii~:x~J.Lo':.~Ddtal~_.r:11~Uclm~•~~. ~ -..:OAnuH "86.:J!JV'" ..,11 an
c..n_ WmdQI IAM4Pll ._. Dlmllft aedan. .,U... new ~ ~ ~ $ ~lOtl.. ~ 541).Cl $G deist ._,. ClOl'ltreCt _P_M_. M5-4Ht.__,... ____ _
PUPP1D, 5 wm cjd, to Ml. Clo na ,n pq. Dir. MY loll )Wr p.fn!
rood bamt:I. 54M5l53 4111 Martne .lcfulp.. fOU GHTn Good. d..., 'C vw. •
S...u, male..---1-&DODtbs. Reber rwfttic boom. W .,.._ ....... Air, one ~~ ~ACEH
an lbota. ~ W au ~. 15'•"· ~ ':1. ~ ~ Rad1o. Cood C'OOdlOont f"REE; Guinn Pip 6: lMVe 1'15. * t15-M e 54&-4CT1 e
c:aae. ~ 411! Heed a Glilll 1•t .. 1eT pC7. Dlr. M-'"1
CHAR.GE m 11n11 11 etth a ...m ect1 OIA8GS m
wm 1uy
Yoar vonmraa-Cit l5ottclMt a pay top doUan. Pale! rot
or noc. Cal RAJ~
67J·11t0
'66 BUICK
Electra 4 Door hardtop. Full
power equipment and fac-
tory air conditionlnr. Real
nice car. No. P1Zl6
$2895
STANSBURY
BUICK
2100 HARBOR BLVD.
COST A MESA 646-9022
'65 BUICK
Dedra. 4 Door hardtop. Full
pow« and factocy alr can-
ditlofting. I...lke new.
$2695
STANSBURY
BUICK
$'195 or best offer. Phone PLYMOUTH
6Cl.491MJ if no ans tr')' apm.1--------
GOING into aerv1ce, must
le1l. '61 aIEV. SS 396;
model 13117; 8 cyl., • ll>ffd.
Xlnt coad. a.cm Mi; a.u.
$2600. 540-3.W
9 P~ Wagon, 1960 Oiev, 6
with P/g. ORIG OWNER.
S395. 675-1502
1965 MALIBU, MR
35,000 mi, Fine graduation
pceeent! $1225 540-2783
'62 CHEVY II NOVA
S.350. or beat oUer
• Eves. CaU 536-4632 •
'59 Olev 6 cyl 3 8Pd Good
motor' tin!•. brakft A:
radio. $Zl5 6~
CHRYSLER
'63 Olryller New Yor1ter, 1
owner, Xlnt cond, Fully
'U PLYMOUTH
9 ~ station Wlg'Oll.
V8, automatic tn.nsrnillRon,
power steering, p o we r
bnikes, factory aJr ooodi-
tioning.
$1595
STANSBUR1Y
BUICK
equip. neoo Eves. S4M629 2100 HARBOR BLVD.
-------COSTAMESA 646-9022
CONTINENTAL 1$7 Ply. 'n'ansportation car. rood coodition. $195 or best
'Cl CONT. conv., lt. blue: otter. 615-2826
ttal clean; Xlnt tires; Orii.1-========
owner $895 646-2071. PONTIAC
COUGAR IOY CAIVEI
'67 COUGAR., like new; 9,000 PONTIAC
Mi., auto. trans,. R/H, n llarbar 81., Colla)(-
pwr. steer.: many emu. Kl 6•4444
$2815. Orig owner 673-T<m ONacw ODwltT• Ww
CORVETI'E Duier tar ftolll • -... ..s ~--~----~~ aen __ d:J-"-·-.......,=-,.,.--:-:--,62 CORVETIE 1965 Pootlac Catalina Ven-ttn 4 Spc:I, stick 91\lft,
Cpe. Q1.ltom1ud front by eX· ar1g1nal mllea &: owner.
pert creflllna.n. New abort Uke new condition. Mmt
block engine in.stalled by eell, aacriflce! 96)-8229
Johnson I: Son with new '60 Pool. Ventura 4 Dr. bdtp.
C'l.utch auembly. 4 speed Auto., power. Xlnt cond.
trans. Rad)o & beat.er. Tbl1 $3!i0. 54&--5694
week onty at
JOHN~b':: & SON RAMBLER
Uncoln-Mm:ury '63 ~. Pf!l'fed.
Cocta Mesa Branch $750 Seltmg only due to a
1941 Harl>or mvd. 642-7ai0 death. 540-«'J04
T·llRD '61 CONVERT., 427/390 HP.
4 ll&XI .. p o• I· tr a c tt on
AM/FM: ~~ wtllte1--.5-,-.T-.-.-.-D-~. white inter. 10.cm mJ.
$3595. 673--0775 Alt.er 6 PM Cpe. Power ateerinl, tnbt
2100 HARBOR BLVD. Weekdl.ys and Windows, Rich Ermine
COSTA MESA 646-9022 wtitte enenor witb ~
•40 BUICK LIMITED 43,000 DODGE black A wtilt.e lntl!rtor all
actoal miles. Orlglnal thru· tn tell> conditon. "1D price
"'bl.It. Nffda clutch. $500. or ·:;s Dodge Station Wagon $495
best offer. Z13: 225-7433 ~ =::~ JOHNSON & SON
1963 RIVIERA 2 door hrdtp. JE 4-4254 att 5 PM Uncoln-Mercury
Automatic, radio, t u 11 Costa Meea BnDcb
poftr, atr, $11S5. &4&-96«1 FALCON tMl Harber Blvd. go.1m0
'65 BWck Special. Auto tTMs, 'M T·Blrd Landau bdtp. Full
RJH, Must ~. S8()0. Call '62 Falcon Squire Waion P"f". air, Uke new. $53 deb,
In morn1np, 89~ auto. perf cond. $39 del. 1111m11 conr:r.ct b91. CU
usume contract bal. Can ftn pvt 1't1· Dlr et-fm :nrao--+~~ •113 T·Bttd-Jt, -~ -· --F~'Cl lie 8'adaG DJnI: PSZPS.. "'s:n \It .uto. fie &tr • .,._ w..-.ie. ttian :a.aan a. XJnt cond.. Call bet t
meny tmu• lierlec:t CX!Od, S...-t.ll.211 N......,... Jt,d. UlA pm l33JZl
wo-t oaer lake•. Newport a.acta uea 'fo.B1rd, tun pwr, ....,
543-9564 • 'U J'Uooll c DR. mttan •• 9ller1f $2800. ~ at DON'T ,s,.. a .,...,, P' Wl&'Oft. ant ltk:tc liblft 1STT Pl a ~ e 11 t I a . NB.
autdr calft -It wtdl • $450. * so-ms ~ 54f-f6S3 aft 8
Oail1 Pilot "1lt M l 1963 FAL<DN ~ '9 T.auu>. "111 power. '°""" One oner, UR, f ..,.s. Good~ ttn!t. ~. White elepbants'f ntme-a.Dbe s.mnoer ~ aft. s. tM.llM
~-------
USED
CAR
SELL
OUT!
'62 CHEVY
IMPALA
Sport Coup• Conn rt.
IVH, PIS, Air,
$666
'63 DAIT .. ,.
2-<lr.. Alft., • ,!$, Alf.
$866
NOYA
2..dr, hdtp, Auto .. lt/H,
$799
$588
'63 PLYM.
ADAN
V /I, Airte., R/H.
$688
$488
'57 CHEVY
111. Allt
Sport Coupe. R/H, Au·
to,
$399
'64 PLYM.
lllAN
a%H• ltfcL
$599
IUY ON
llACH CITY'S
IASY CllDITI ..... ,... ...... ,.. ... _. ... "' * .................. ... ..... ,..°"" ...................... ··-· Wl 'LL NILi' YOU l8'f U~ Cltl OIT AND mu. SAVI YOU MOllrtt
• )
-•
---.... -. . ..---.._ -.. ... -.. -. . -. . . -
~itr\ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
Unshackle the Schools
Public school students on the Orange Coast may
be receiving good Instruction in the b a s i c courses.
Those bound for college can go weU prepared in those
basics -but they may also have been denied access
to valuable elective courses in, for example. music and
homemaking. They may also bave wasted a great deal
of time.
The problem has grown out of a steady increase in
mandates from the state level which have produced
such rigidities in curriculum that educators feel choked
and pushed into a corner. Where the state mandates
45 minutes a day five ways a week. the fast learner
wastes time be could give to enriching elective courses.
But provision could also be made fo11tthe slower learn-
er if there were flexibility In course scheduling.
A new mandate on driver training, for example,
makes it possible to combi~e this with. say, physical
education. So financiaJJy hard-pressed school districts
face higher costs with no offsetting benefit. Some dist-
ricts are, in fact, without space to teach courses which
the ::-~i\te says must be taught.
So the districts are seeking flexibility under a bill
now in the Legislature. The Cahfornia School Boards
Association Is calling it the "Curriculum Magna Carta
Bill." As SB 1, it has already passed the Senate. It
will be reviewed by an Assembly sub-committee this
coming Thursday afternoon.
The bill was defeated last year. Main opposition
came from physical education organizations. But local
educators say there is no in tent in the bill to diminish
the role of physical education in the conditioning of
students. All they seek is freedom to act al the local
level for more sensible scheduling of classes and lime.
They would do as the colleges do -give daily
classes in some subjects, but only two or three days
a week to others of lesser importance. And they would
break the deadly monotony which now often produces
Science Differs; -------------------
Not Technology
There is a great. and seemingly
;>ermanent, confusion in the public
mind about what constitutes "sci-
rnce." When most people talk about
"science." they are really talking
about "technology" -which is
responsible for some of the good and
m.:uiy of the bad things around today.
Science is a methU<l of answer.in~
tlH~oretical questions; technology is a
method of solving practical problems
(and thus creating new problems out
of the "solutions"). Science didn't
create the atomic bomb: tectmology
did that. But we live in an age when
technology dominates science . through
the allocation of funds and resources.
ACTUALLY, as Dr. J06eph W. Still
has recently pointed out, ''It is not
true that tn order to do research it is
necessary to have th<>usands of dollars
worth of elaborate equipment. AU you
ne('d is one good question."
Dr. Still reminds us that the 1957
~obel Prizes in medicine were given
tn three doctors for developing a n d
perfecting the technique of cardiac
catheterization. The original basic ex-
periment in thls series was performed
by a German physician, Dr. Werner
ft orssman. who passed a rubber tube
costing no more than a few dollars
through a vein into his own heart.
AND i\ NOBEL PRIZE in physics. hr
points out. was wo;1 by a British
rhysicist. C. F. Powell. whose ex-
p~riment on cosmic rays required only
""'>ln!!rarh1c plates and an ordinary
:•eroscope Some of the most basic
research on the properties of rubber
were performed at a tiny South
Carolina college by a man using a
ruler, some weights. a thermometer,
and a box of rubber bands.
"The most important experiment I
ever performed,'' Dr. Still goes on to
say, "cost less th a n $50 of ~tuaJ
money. It was one of the first two ex-
periments to disprove the belief in
·universa1 chemical turnover' that had
achieved almost the status of a
natural law prior to such ex-
periments.''
LABORATORIES and re 11 ear ch
groups spend tens of mJllionR domg
what the public thinks is "scientific"
cxperimentatic.n. Actually. onlv .a
small fraction of this sum _t:('nerallv
goes into basic and theoretical
research; most of It is put into
technology, to find ways of manufac-
turing products made feasible by new
scientific discoveries.
''All you need is one good question ."
This is as true today as it was in the
time of Archimedes or Galileo or
Newton. It is th(' imaginative mind or
man. harnessed to-logic . l h a t
establishes new frontiers 1n science.
What comes out nf the giant
laboratories may be useful, but is ju~t
as likely to be trivial. redundant. w
lethal.
Quackery Growing Fast
Tlungs a columnist might never
•ow If he didn't open his mail:
:~oney seems to be sprea<ilng
"'round more lately. Families which
· •'1tain some 30 percent of the popula·
n now have annual incomes of or.o a year or more.
Ever get the idea your pet d<>g is
.... in!! you out of home? Well, maybe
~ wUI -i1 you let him. The stom-ach r a 40-pound pooch can hold three
•r<; as much as that of a 150-pound
.' Icdical quackery Is one of the na·
'i'ln's fastest growing businesses.
Authorities estimate it$ cost to the
puh1ic has risen from Sl billion an-
.., ~1·y five yean ago to S2 billion now.
~ALT WAS ONCE so scarce that it
was used as moM y to pay Roman
lc'!ioonalres. a n d the modern word
s;"lary comes from the Latin term
nlarium or "salt money." But we're
in no danger of running out of wt to·
day. There are enough salt beds and
domes along the Gulf Coast alone to
Dear Geor~:
You goody-good edvice col-
umnltta makf me lick with your
outxfatetl pratUe about "rules"
for aex. You all aound Ukt Vic·
torian schoolmarms. What do
~ • • if apJ>iib
...-~~~~~'---t;t-:~ .
~d eno\ilb t.o be oliHaS!I ooed
&ncf ttuJr.)' L DQf (JO l'._O\I fuave to -
try to rottt off your lgnorance
oa tbe yocmaer gtneration? Oet
oot dd Uwe 1 tittle l
TEENY 'BOP
C>fat Teeny Bop:
My trllt Ind 1~ cb!ldrtn tffp
mt pretty clOH to b<llM.
sat.tsfy America's DP.eds for 26 cen·
turies. Incidentally. only 5 percent of
salt is used to fiavOr food. The rest is
employed in chemical industries.
Careless driving causes more high-
way fatalities than excessive speed .
The Automobile Manufacturers Asso·
c1ation says that only 5 per 'cent of in-
jurious accidents occur at speeds
above 70 miles an hour.
THE K N 0 W LE 0 G E JAM:
Research cPnters throughout the
world now turn out 60 million pages of
technical infonnation yearly. A 1'3st-
reading scientist would have to read
eight hours a day until Ole year 33(13
Just to wade through 1968's outpouring
or facts.
Man against Himself : Su I c Ide is
now the fuurttl leading cause ol death
among boys of colleg~ age. and a
leading cause among Americans of all
~oops. At least 20.000 kill themselves
each year, and fore~ one who suc·
ceeds abOut eig?lt to 12 try and fail .
IRONY: Although the United States
pt"Oduefl enough food to feed millions
~d Uie globe. nutrition e~p:?rts
eftimate that 20 per rent of our own peo~. either throui.ih lgMr.;n<'e or
.,; O\.f A.We
--
student boredom and poor performance~ They would
also like to stimulate teachers and produce beneficial
innovations.
An analogy used to describe·tbe results of the ex·
cess ol state mandates ls this: "It's Uke hiring a brain
surgeon to perform a delicate four-hour operation and
then telling him it bas to be d one in five U-rrunute
segments."
The analogy is apt. It points up the flaw in the
state-imposed rigidities when only flexibility makes
sense. School board members and all other friends of
the schools are being urged to attend the Thursday
hearini in Sacramento, or at least make their voices
heard in support of the bilJ.
The measure should be supported vigorously and
immediately to forestall referral to the Assembly Ways
and Means Committee for possible crippling amend-
ment. It is, in truth, a bill to unshackle California pri-
mary and s e c 0 n d a r y education to meet changing
conditions.
Quietest in Memory
Easter Week, 1968, made history as the quietest
in memory along the Orange Coast.
Permanent residents appear to be more than pleas-
ed -all except those merchants who have counted on
a bonanza from the spring ritual and visitor infiux.
Perhaps they'll make it up over the ljalance of the
year -and suffer less from the unruly mobs which
have marred some past youth explosions.
At least the community-at-large likes it this way.
extra business or no. " '"-
• ALL RJGUT, O'SRIEN, WHERE TUE MELL. HAVE YOU SEEN?*
On the Value
-Of-S-heep
And Peasants
There's good news today for
humanists. It concerns those 6,000
sheep the Army apparently killed
through a regrettable accident while
testing a deadly nerve gas at its prov-
in1t grounds in Utah.
A reader. noting that the Army cur-
ren<.'.)' pavs '34ln repar..ations for each
peasant it accidentally kills in Viet-
nam. inquirej how much it would pay
for each sheep it accidentally killed in
Utah.
The question. of course. is whether
o u r Government values a s h e e p in
Utah more highly than a peasant in
-· -Arf Hoppe )
Vietnam. And fortunately for the sani-
ty o! us all, the answer is a ringing
l•No!"
ll values them about th e sam('.
THE GOING RA TE for a 150-pound
ewe on the range in Utah, according to
the experts. is only about $30 -or $4
less than a 150-pound Vietnamese
peasant.
M o r e encouragingly. a too.pound
lamb brings a m('re $26 -a good $8
less than a 100-pound Vietnamese
<'hild.
On lhe other hand, our society qujte
1•orrcctly values a 20().pound prize ram
al anywhere from $100 to $500 on up.
depending on his ped igree. But the
c·omparison hE're Is v:ilucless as very
few Vietnamese peasants weigh 200
pounds and even fewer h a v e
pedigrees.
(){ course. in a llerd of fl ,000 sheep
there would not be a great number of
prize rams. And thus we see that the
average price per head would be ap·
proximately S34 -uf either sheep of
peasants.
1'HE NEWS THAT we value sheep
and peasants equ:iHy will naturally
cause outrage in many quarters of our
society.
"Since the dawn of time, the sheep
has provided us with f09d and
clothing," it will be argued. "But the
Vietnamese peas~nl produces neither
wool nor mutton. To value them
l!quaUy is patently iUogical.
"Moreover, generations of un-
scieritific random breeding have pro.
duced a peasant which is oa:rrow in
the shoulders and sinewy In the ham~
-a scrawny and definitely tnrerior
specimen.
"Lastly, the peasant lacks the docili·
ty of the sheep -often rePA.¥ing the
t'ost of care and feeding by fleeing to
U1e hills, taking up arms and lnfllcllng
serious injury and even death.
"Far from being an ass.et to our
society like the sheep, the peasut is
not only worthless, but a dWlnct
llabl.lity. A~ bounty per bud would
make more sense."
Theg'I~ Never llnderstand Negro Vnrest
·"Jf Walf-Ot=riiiliffereD&-
To thi! Editor:
ram writing this letter, not u a ~P
ly to. but rather a reflection on, a Jet-
ter written to you by Mr. David Davin
(Mai lbox, Aps-il 12).
Although bom in California r was
raised and schooled in Washington D.
C. in a.o era when segre~tion in our
nati<n's capital was as absolute as in
the Deeop South. I lived for 17 years in
a moderate income aret less than one
mile from Wasllington's worst ghetto
arol. Negroes from the ghetto didn 't
<;are walk through our section Of town
and we were afraid to &t. into theirs.
AFI'ER A STINT in the Anny at the
close of World War II. I took a tem-
porary job as a bill collector that car-
ried me deep into tile worst part of
that ghetto looking for dead-beats.
There I received the shock of my tile.
A shock that haunts me to this day.
Here. just a few blocks from my
home. in our nation's capital. human
beings were living under conditions of
~gradation that are difficult to
describe. Conditions that you would
have to see and smell to believe.
Half naked. filthy chi!dren covered
with fly-attracting sores, living in
shacks. 900\e with dirt floors. were not
an uncommon sight. Everywhere
there were grease-soaked walls and
smells of food being cooked that you
and I would vomit if we tried to eat.
IT WAS HARD to believe that for so
many years I had lived &o near to this
human wasteland. r was protected
from learning about a n d un-
derstanding the problems that existed
by a wall o( fear and indifference put
up by my neighbors. friend·S and my
own parents.
Here in Orange County, In Costa
Mesa where I live. in Newport Beach
where I work. I am .again surrounded
by a wall of fear and indiffer-ence. a
wan erected by my neighbors, ac-
quaintances and fellow workers -
persons who will never quite un-
derstand what the Negro unrest is all
about.
Mr. Davin. l feel. is one wbo will
never understand.
DAVID ROSS
luqe e11 Mmu
To the Editor:
What acid some of us are pouring
out over the life and death of Martin
Luther King. What praise and hope for
tbe same man and cause others are
voicing. And bow simple the solution
to this "American Dilemma" of ours
re&lly la.
Suppose we bad an old cheat full of
Amertcan virtues. Would 1t'e not find
there one that coU11Ml1 us tD judge a
man on his merits! I am conflnced
that all of your readers •pP!Ove beartllY of th:11 simple mulm. without
Dear
Letter$ from readerr ar1 welcome.
Normally 10riters should conve11 their
musages in 300 words or uss. Th•
fight to condense Letters to fit spac1
or eliminat1 libel a.s reserved. All ltt-
urs must include sig'1llture and mnil-
inu a.ddre$$, bu:t na?M1 I.Dill be ...u.iJth.
held on request.
exception. or how else could we be a
nation of individualists and proud or
it?
'f!IE RECIPE IS simple, then : Just
don t you and I ever again say or even
think anything about any individual's
worth that we cannot support on the
basis of his own words or actions. Lel
you and I begin each new ac·
quajntance with the assumption that
the other guy ls all right. I Unless he is
like you he will have some faults, but
basically he is bound to be o.k.) That's
all.
U we all adopt this simple principl~
in ALL our social relations we w i I I
have a great. free. fair, and just socie-
ty very soon.
HUBERT H. HOFFMAN
Trum•tt •ntl &enned"
To the Editor:
J would like to correct an error
printed on your editorial page on April
8 in the Allen-Scott column. It was
stated that in the three years that
John F. Kennedy was President. Presi-
dent Truman was never invited to the
White House. One of the first people to
be invited to visit the White House
after President Kennedy was sworn in
was President Truman. and he was a
guest several times thereafter.
YOUR SYNDICATE writers musl
have been thinkinit of t h e
Elsenwhower years th11t Presidt1nt
Truman never saw the inside of the
White Hou~e. It seems that writer~
can't find enouizh vituperation to heap
upon the Kennedys, they have to make
it up.
I will take this opportunity to say l
do enjoy your editorial P,age. and
agree with your editorials most of the
tiple.
MRS. MONA L. AVERILL
w....., C'retlft
To the Editor:
I undentmd that in your Issue of
April 10, you pabli~ the story ol
the AllCQe ot a man at the Wedge in
Newport Beech. giving fUU Cftldit to
tbe UNguarcL My a o n. D 111 Jona-
Quotes
•
bloed, w~ at the scene and his llt.ot'y
of what happened is suffic:Wltly at
variance with your account to war-
rant a secood look. '
Aca>rding to Bill. ~ surf was
quite heavy, a set of approximately
23 waves of from 12 to 15 fleet high.
The victim, known to him onJy as
"Phil" and coming from Ohio, got
into trouble. f''irst to get to him were
P~ Carden t of 600 Michael Place,
Newport Beach) and one other fellow.
They weren't stroog enough to get
the man to safety. Bill Jongbloed, 6
feet. 4 inches. and 200 poun~, man-
aged first to get him to breathe again
and then IX> get him out of the danger
zone.
OTHER BOYS THERE were Dan
Starr, Kevin E~an, Duke <last name
not known I. Bob Bell and Tum Cox s-
well. Bob Bell called the lifeguard. who
arrived after t.he vicrtlm was out of
danger, on a small skiff outside. Tom
Coxswell got a skiff also. bl.It the vic-
tim was on another boat already.
T ,ater they transferred him to the Sea
Watch.
These youn~ £ellows did not save
a man's life to collect glory. They
were very grateful to be there at tM
right time and capable of .accomplish-
in~ the rescue. Ho~V'e't. tt does n o t
sit very well with them to see the case
¢ven publicity with all the credit
l!oin~ to someone who did not do any. thing.
It seems to me that you owe ttlese
Y:OOJl!! men some generous ~Jmi·
lion. From what l hear. this i.s not the
. first time that tbey saved the life of
llomeone unable to cope with ~ Wed~e : also. it might be in~g to
see how weU the lifeguards cover this
s~t. which is bad medicine for poor swimmers.
HANS JONGBLOED-UNTERHORST
BuHflbeg Schoeb
To the Editor:
DAILY PILOT editorials seem to be
ve.ry interested in schools and the
building or more schools. They don't
ever seem ti>' be interested in where
the money comes from to pay. for all
of these ideals.
Both my mother and father were
school teachers, I am a mechanical
engineer, and I know a lot about ftresa
and strain of materials and I cannot
agree with the so-called master plan·
ners. It seems the master planners
an mostly interested in spending pro-
perty owners' money.
THERE IS ALSO a National
AssociatJon of School Architects whose
members like to see more and more schools built
The big plan for CaUfornla s~ms to
be to destroy old California, make it
all over new to 1Qtne nut's master plan
and let property owners pay f<r il
I.E. ALEXANDER
,•
Tuesday, April 16, 1968
TM ~'°"°' pogs of uac DdW
PUot '"'" to fftf0f1'1t a7l4 ~ _.)_ .. ..I -'-..---.--