HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-04-23 - Newport Harbor Daily PilotVOL'.. 6T, NO. 98, ~ SECTIONS, 102 PAGES NEWPORT llACH. CAOFORtiV: TUESDAY, APRI( 23, 196t TEN CENTS
lrVine Annex Wins Unanimous Okay
O,Urclhnen authorized the dty
building deputment to issue srading
and building pmnit:s iol' UM f1rat
model bomea at the MacArthur
Boulevard-Ford Road site. They will
be built in time for the summer
martel
The decision by m u n i cl p a I
lawmaken was futilely protested. by
former Newport Elementary School
Dbtrict board pttSident Harvey D.
Pease and another rt1ldent, Mrs.
Kids, Dog and Sirens
DAILY f LOT """' W •ICMN K_.
View tn mirror of fire truck tells the story of excitement in quiet
residential area of Costa Mesa where city fire department units
Monday afternoon attracted gal~ery of youngsters ~n bikes and at
least one curious dog to watch firemen fight blaze m home of Hoyt
and Madelyn Platt at 3276 Iowa St. Damage was listed at $1,500 to
structure and $2,000 to contents. No one was injured.
Raee for Life
Officer Speeds Child to Hospital,
A Costa Mesa police officer flagged
down by the frantic parents of a
stricken child Monday night raced the
girl and her mother to Hoag Memorial
Hospltal for treatment.
Crystal Watton, 5, daught.er of Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Wataon, <:i 21116 Club Mesa Place, was given emergency
trotmeat and released for further at·
teation by her family physician.
Hospital spoke.smen dJd not say
wbat caua«I the little girl to go into
CGllvulsiODI and faint.
Officer Dave Sorenson, who toot the
m~er and child to the hospital with
red light& on and siren walling, srald
Crystal was unconscious a n d
bl'eathing irregularly.
Sore!lsoo said he was just pulllng
out of the Costa Mesa Police Facility
at 99 Fair Drive when Wat.son drove
up and begged far help in getting Crrs·
tal to a doctor.
Jt appeared there might not be time
to wait for an ambulance, officers
sa.ld, so Sorenson made the emergency
run while Mrs. Donna Wat.son cradled
her sick daughter.
It's 'Community' Time;
Order Extra Magazines
The comptete story of the Harbor Area ls told today in facts, figures
and photos tn the 52i>age YOUR COMMUNITY magazlne wrapped In a
two-color co~eT wtrlcb Includes the m~ up-to-date map of Ne~ Beach.
COlta Mesa and vicinity available anywhere. It's inside this edition ol the
DAILY PILO'I'.
Not only will you want to check this 1968 edition of the DAll. Y
PJLOT "encyclopedia" for {Nquently used telephone numbers, little
known facts and inter.Ung pbotol of wbere and how you live and work.
but you probably will want lddiUonal copies ol it for fllend5 and reJaU~.
Use the coupon below to order eztn copies. ---------.-.------
Ple... aall me ........ copies o( tlle 19ee edition of Cotta Mesa·
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C25 ct11ta per copy) ln colDI or UmPI to conr tbe purchut.
Name •....•••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , ••••••• ,
Addr·tU ........................................................... I •••••••
City' . I ' ..................................... I • • ... ZIP . • • • • • • • • t •••••••
(Clip and mall coUJ)On to: DAlLY PILOT CirculaUoa Dept , P 0. Bolf
lM>. Costa Meaa, c.llf 98.) I
+--·--r-------1
Katheryn Hallberg. •
They aUed tb6 cowldl .. ~ ltj>
tion until the lTvine Oo. could be
persuaded to give, rather than Mil. an
eigbt-acre elementary adlool Ike la
the tracL to the N~lilea Unllielf
District f
"That's the leut the Inioe Co. caa
ch>." said Mrs. Hallberi·
lrvtne Oo. V1ce P!WkllDt Ba,...
Watson, however, aakl a lift ut-.tb91
Is neither likely DOI' eqa:ita1ile.
CouncUmen aided wtth Watlon'1 views and those of thelr own attorney.
Said City A ttomey Tully Se1'1ftOU?:
"In CalUornla, the law ii pretty
c I e a r · c u l . City a.nd county
governments have no control over
IC'bools sites and fadlitl.es. There is
nothing whatever the council can do in
this regard that ls within the city's
leraI responsibilities."
Mrs. Hallberg uld in Wettdleste"?
Oowrty, N.Y., where b &rmerly·liv·
ed. developere are required to provide school lites free of <.'barge.
Watson responded to this by aayLng:
"I don't know about the New York
system, but I assume H's an equitable
law. And that's all we ask. that we be
treated like everyone else, and not singled out."
He said tbe huge landowning cor·
poratlon recognizes "the problem this
community bas with school bond issues.••
Youth Draws 60-day Term
"U there ls an alternative system to
rlnancing scbool oeeds, we're willlni
to sit down and discuss it " he
declared. ''But we will continually
resist the conclusion that the Irvine
Co. Is a special citizen. We ask only
that all citizens and property owners
be 'treated alike.''
Watson also denJed assertions by
Pease that the Irvine Co. was
overburdening school dt5trict tax·
(See ANNEX, Pap %)
If Flag a Symbol, So's Jail
By BRUCE BENSON
Of tM Dellf ,... .....
Joe McClung. the Seatlt youth who
pleaded guilty to using all American
flag as a beach towel in Newport
Beach, was senteoced Mooday to eo
days in Orange County Jail
"U the Flag is ooly a symbol to you,
then jail Is only a symbol to me," aaid
Municipal Judge Donald Dungan.
Judge Dungan also ordered Mcclung
to write an euay of a minimum 2,000
words "oo your tblnkinc and feeling
about what a Jll& means to any coun·
King Bounty
Eyed by Ray,
s.ys r.ollvict
DALTON, Ga. (UPI) -A prfeon
buddy of James Earl Ray said today
that when Ray beard there was a
"million-dollar bounty'' on Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., he 'mlliled and said
''I'll collect it."
Ray, a ~year-<>ki fugitive from the
Missouri State Prtson. is accused by
the FBI of assassinating King in Mem-
phis on April ._
In the Dalton jail, Raymond Curtis.
40, awaiting appeal on a murd~r
sentence, said he has known Ray in the Kansas City Jail, the federal
prison at Leavenworth. Kan., and the
state prison at Jefferson City, Mo.
He described Ray as likeable. ad·
dieted to "dope," a "loner" and a man
concerned only with money. On the day President Kennedy w~s
assassinated -Nov. 22. 1963 -Curtis
saJd he. Ray, and about I:'>'> other
prisoners were in an exerCJse yard
when they beard the news.
He said Ray remarked "well.
somebody made a pretty penny on
that."
About a week later. Curtis said. he
and Ray were in the yard when "a
new man just 1n off the street''. t?ld
them ''the businessmen's association
has a million dollar bounty out for
Martin Luther King.'' Ray smiled, Curtis recalled. and
said "lf there's a million dollars out
for Klng, I believe if I ever get out I'll
collect it." Curtis said he never fi gured ou t
what the "new man" meant by t~e
"businessmen's association." lie said
he couldn't remember who the ma n
was .
Boy, 13, CJin gs
To Life After
Cave-in Rescue
A 13-year~ld Garden Grove boy is
In critica.l condition today in Pe1lm
Harbor Hospital following bis rescue
Monday night from a homemade c11ve
which collapsed and burled him ahve
ror more than 20 minutea.
Dr. LawreDCf' uwln. UM pbysictan
attendln1 the victim, Robert Snyder.
said thb mornlnt. "The boy, went tor
an unknowft time without oxygen and
his heart had stopped beating. His
heart la functioning now but he re·
mains unconscious.•·
The boy wu pulled lo sa/ety bf.
Garden Grove police •d firemen a -ler the cave be and two other t>o~·s
had been dl1'1nc ht the sJtle of a dry
flood control ch&mlel behind his home
at 10382 Mornln,.._ Drive. caved tn
on him.
He was ,iven emaiency treatment by omcer Donald CAmpbell and flre-
man Hal Pott.I incl~ oxyaen and
atenW heart munge as lie did not
seem t.o be breathina at the Ume
Ttl• otbe two boya, Fred UDdsey,
14. and Joseph Dlu, U, 1crambled
out or the cave unharmed but a large
rnck (ell from the roof of the c11ve
Ind pinned lM Sn_Jdet boy.
,,
try and specifically to this country."
Thtl judge directed jail of11ciala to
make all materials available to the
youth that he needs for his assign-
ment. including any desired reference
materials from Orange C o u n l y
Library.
McClung, 19, appeared be£ore the
judge clad in jeans and a short-sleeved
sweatshirt. It was typical prisoner's
garb for Orange County Jail where he
already had spent. a weekend in lieu of
$315 bail since his ~ last Tburs-
d11y.
Mcclung said he had lefl Seattle
Community College. and was b'avellng
with a biend to Mexico when they
made their fateful pause in Newport
Beacb.
He said be bought two 8-foot by 12·
foot flags to use as tarpaulins against
the elements on the trip south.
"I'd never thought about disrespect
for the Flag," he said.
''Well. then. what were you thinking
about?" snapped the judge. "I have a
feeling if you used t:he flag of Mexico
like you used ours you'd get a surprise
at their treatment of you."
McClung's friend was released from
Speirs and Sumner
2 County Judges Back
Chang~··in Drug Laws
Two Orange County judges favor
legislation to modify California's
marijuana possession law.
Tbe Assembly ls set to debate a
measure Wednesday, authored by Re·
publican Assemblyman Craig Biddle
of Riverside, that would give judges
an option in handing down marijuana
sentences.
Fnoring the move are Superior
judges William C. Speirs of Newport
&ach and Bruce W. Sumner of La-
guna Beach.
Biddle's bill would give a judge an
alternatJve from the present law
which makes possession of marijua·
na and other dangeroUJ drugs a felo·
ny, An option of sending the ofCender
to county jail /or up to one year as
in ·Jess serious misdemeanor charges
is the key to the proposed legislation.
Judge Speirs, slhing this year on
the adult crimlnaJ bench, feels that
jUdge should be allowed to determine
whether the particular defendants is
a "repeater" or a first-time user sub·
ject to leniency,
Judge Sumner, while urging com·
pliance with present marijuana laws
aa long as they are on the books.
agrees that defendants in m1U1y cases
could be given less serious sentences.
Sumner is sitting on the juvenile
court this year. Both judges find
their calendars overloaded with mari-
juana cases.
A person convicted or a felony is
usually barred from later employ·
ment which reqwres a monetary
bond and from service with the armed
forces.
Hassle on Flag Lowering
Before City Wednesday
A request for city council apology
for falling U> lceep the city's U.S. Flag
lowered during the Martin Luther
King mourning period will be discuss-
ed Wednesday, Laguna Beach Mayor
Glenn Vedder said.
Veddel' said he ha& received the Jet·
ler he requested lrom 0 . A. Thomas.
spokesmen for the Negroes of the
community. so the matter will be
taken up at the council study session.
He said he hopes a city policy on
Flag lowering will be developed , but
intimated It will be difficult.
"Do you have any suggest.ions on
Flag protocol?" he asked. "Whe~ do
you draw the line ? If you do It (lower
the Flag) too often. it doe$n'l mean
anything."
Thomas told the council last w~k
that when the Flag is lowered In
Washington. D.C. and Vietnam It
shou ld be lowered over LafUDa City
Hall. He asked that either tht. mayor or
F reeman Believes
Humphrey Best Demo
W ASH I NG T 0 N (UPI)
Agriculture Secr«ary OrvWe L •
Freemu. who nominated John F.
J<enoedy for the pnsldency at the 1989
DemocrtUc OODvenUoa, t o d a y .,.
doraed Hubert H. Hwnpbrey u the
party's ''best choi<.'9" for 1981.
Fretiun Wd be lilted and admired
Stns. Robert F. Kennedy and EuttM
.J. McCarthy. but added: "J have
mad11 my ch<>ice and It wu not a dif.
flcult dtcltlon."
c<>uncilmen apologize ··ror non·ef·
fkiency Jn not lowering the Flag to
half staff all through the ceremony
(days of mourning )."
At time~ the tribute was neglecte\1,
he said.
Thr ee Crap Out
As Police Raid
Patio Dice Game
Three men today faced gambling
charges after they were arrested In
Newport Beach Sunday for allegedly
rolling dice on a rear patio at 1612 W.
Ocean Front.
Ordered to appear for arraignment
Thursday under S6S bail each wer11
Harley R. Manning. 34. of 15341
Padres. Westminster: William E.
Marcus, 46, or the W. Ocean Front ad·
dress, and CarrolJ F. Horner, 34. ol
Anaheim.
Police said they received a com·
plaint of a noisy party. PlaJnclothes of·
fice.r ~ Gloshen went to the ad-ctre.1 and sald he heard loud cries o(
"Roll that nine," and "Come, baby,
come."
He sajd he saw the thrtt rolllng dice
and confiscated s:m allilgedly be.Ing
used in the fame.
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market cont1.nu3d to show atren(th In
moderately acUve trading this al· t.erln. (Ste quotations, Pages 8-1).
authorities and was reported returning
lo Seattle. McClung was directed to
report back to Judge Dungan at the
end ot his jail term.
He was charged, convicted and
sentenced under a section of the
Military and Veteram C.ode whicb
makes it a misdemeanor to deflle the
American Flag.
Residents nellr 29tb Street and
Ocean Front in Newport Beach bad
complained to police that McChmg
was stretched out oo tbe Flag and was
sunning himself.
Fire Equipmen~
Ruling Saves
Marinas Bundi~
Newport Hamor marina opea ••
were sa~ at leaat f:Z00,000 Mond.t1 night. ••
City aouncllmen assured theJn the
savi ngs by unalilmousty vot.ini to re·
move the retroactive provisions of a
four·year-0ld firefighting equipment,
ordinance.
When originally adopted, the crdi·
nance gave more than 70 marina in-
stallations four )'t!aTS to comply. The
deadline was this coming August.
The law reqiures standpipes, hose-
llnes, inJet connections, extingujshers
and alarm systems at all marinas.
Several months ago. througti the
Chamber of Commerce's Marina Divi·
sion , marina operators protested the
looming deadline.
Larry Miller, chairman of the di·
vision. sald it would cost $204.000 fur
alJ harbor area marinas to comply
with the ordinance. He and others
claimed it was too stringient a law,
and not justified by the harbor's fir&
l~ record.
The city staff then took the subject
under further study. Monday thty ~
turned to the oouncU with a pn>p05'ed
revision, worked out with the chamber
division. It is this:
All the requirements sf and. b\lt ex -
isUng marinas need not install thP
fire fJgbting equipment-unless more
than 50 percent of any one marina
has to be reconstructed after a fire
or explosion.
New marl.Das must put in the equJp-
ment.
City Manager Harvey Hurlburt told
councilmen:
"This represents a reasonablt com-
prom ise which will provide the boat-
ing public with the required prolec·
lion whiJe , at the same time. not im-
posing an unrealistic financial hard-
shjp on the operators."
or .. ':.£.c
Wut•er
Summer's stepping In early
this week. observes lorecaster
Gordon ShJeJds who looks for
readings approaching 74 along
the sbore and 78 further inland
under typically sunny skies.
INSWE TODAY
Shirltll Temple Black i8 40
11ecm o/.d todcv: 1he $4f!B 1he'&
stiU noi through with polihel.
Set htt "t~" ond "now" on
Pogc 4.
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. r , "" DAJLY PILOT -
Russia, China w~a&ness Led to Haµoi Stalld
l4NDON <UPn -Tbt l'OlriAI
wtpkneN of Commuai.rt CbiD.t and
erotioo of Soviet leader.nip 1n the &d
camp have proved dedsive fact.ors In
Hanoi's dramatic decision Lo proclaim
an independent policy cours. from
both Molcow a11d Peking.
A\lt.boritative diplomatic sources
saht today these considerations lie
bdtind Hanoi's announcement Mooday
that the party must "flrmlf preserve
its independence'' in the Commurust
world community.
Hanoi's st.tement, amounting to a
virtual declaratioo ol independence
from ita key allies. bore out diplornallc
reports earLier Uus month thal the
rtCbDe ot .Pre.sldeot Ho Chi Minh of
Nonb Viltnam'MI dtcidtd io , ... "'
a free bad lit dltmnbdna the Mn
c~ of die •• lad of uy pollible iettfeme11t al h Vletnem collfUct.
Neltber Peking nor Moscow was
consulted by Hanoi when it responded
favora\>ty three weeks ago t.o Presi-
dent Johnson's peace talks offer .
The formal independence declara-
tion o! Hanoi Mooday thus marked a
major turning point which opens up
new diplomatic vistas, a I t h o u g h
alltbo:ritatlve informaritl warned that
they do not by any means fore9hadow
a softening of the Commumst line in
any peace discussions, 1f and when
~ .... ialll;
U• ... -,.. ':...: 011= ................. ol.S.
,-.o1i.twopwe,.111•r •·
What make. UM move more 1urprls-
tne ls the fac\ that wltboot tMir con-
tinued aid North Vietnam'• and the
Viet Cong's military effor11 would col·
lapse in no time.
Pelung Is giving atd ln llDail arms
and food and manpower -IOllle 40,000
men lo do vifal road repeir work.
Russia Is aupplylna the heaV).' stufl -
the SAM missiles. ~ks, MIG tlghter.s
and vi t.Uy needed experience.
But the picture has been cbaneing
latfly, mMa1aDJ lld ,.._..,,
Red Cllina. accordlng to latest
nporta to teadl ltl& Wett, appeart to
be crlppJed increuibgl; u a result ol
her so-called cultural revolution and
the apparent inability to rest.ore order
and authority. Premier Chou En-Lai
only a short while ago was understood
to have asserted himself kl push.Ing for
a more orderl,y-eoune. He now Is
reported to be losinC ground again.
Communist informant& said the
Chinese supplies to Haooi have been
steadily declining, and there bas ooce
again been Interference with SOviet
supplies passing tttrou;h Chlnese ter-
rllrJto~.
'nle Inf orm&DU lnals~ that, for the
moment at )llJt, CommW2Jlt Qtioa
then{ore doe.I not represeot a force
whose anger Hanoi need fear. Peking
has left liLUe doutlt tmt it oppo1e1
Hanoi's pr0po6ed neaotiations with
WaahingtOn. But tt apparently cannot
block them, though it could balt wtial
aid lt Is still giving. Communist
diplomau said Peking nevertheless
would not dare do so fOT fear o( the
adver1e impact Ofl world Communist
opilMoo.
Russia Ln turn Is In tile tt\roes ·of a
grave crisis alfecting her role in t.he
..v_ .....
Moeoow la ltrtlnJftf f&r a • ld
Communilt 1ummit in Moscow by
November or December and bas bad
to rtN>tme~ publicly her role as t1"9 center ef workt eom.m-.m. i.n ad·
d1tlon to procla:iming publicly every
party's rl&M to f<>Bow lt• own In~
depoodent course. •
Thi.s is precisely what Hanoi has
done oow. It bu 'tueo up Moscow's
however relucwt word Ud has
declared for all to know tn.t ~m now
on Its dedlion1 Will be determined by
whit suits Hanof. irrespective ol its
a Illes like or dis like.
Tribute for a ·Tough Joh King's Slayer
Now 'Ju st a Councilman,' Ex-May or Gruber Appl.auded Search Moves
Newport Attorney Says
Secrecy Bill 'Horrible'
There he was. seated at the far end
of the council=nanic bench. attending
his flrst meeUn& In four years as -m
ht~ words -"just a councilman ..
And for former Newport Beach
Mayor Paul J. Gru~r. Monday's
seSS1o'n was a memorable one.
His coUeagues. led by new Mayor
Doreen Marshall, paid hjm a surprise.
and.laviah. tribute. The ex-mayor was
visibly touched.
Mrs. Marshall, at the outset of the
meeting, asked for and got unanimous
approval of a reaolutfon thankinS?
Gruber "for representing the council
Summer Swim
Sessions Slated
At Bo ys' Ouh
A series or summer swim programs
for boys two years old and up. with a
maxhnum of eight youngsters per
class, has been announced by the Boys
Club or the Harbor Areas.
The two-week cl11sses at the central
branch, 594 CenU!r St.. begin May 6
and continue through Sept. 26. for boys
in five cetegories.
These include non-swimmer. begin-
er, advanced beginner. intermediate
and swimmer. with ree structures
varying by age and number of
students per class.
NonswimmeTs two to three years
old, for example, are taught two at a
lime, for an '18 fee.
Reservations may be made at the
clubho9se and at least half the fee
must ~ paid at ttiat time. No refunds
will be made afteT a child had taken
the first class.
Summer ~wim classes are offered
from 8 to 11:30 a.m., and from noon to
2 p.m.. with recTeadonal swimming
scheduled in the afternoon. according
to executive director Loy Yantorn.
Diving and lifesaving classes will be
schedllled and lru>Ounced at a later ru.te.
Hqspirols Join
Pediatric Plans
ln a move with fa r-reachin.1? Im-
plications, UCI Colleee of Medicine and
Memorial HospitaJ of Loog Bead> are
im.egrating tileir pediatric training
prolJ'ama. it was announced today.
As an imtial step of itle affiliation,
H. David Mosier, M.D .• head of the
divUitlo of metaboliml and en-
docr~logy at the university, moved lo M~ial Hospital to establiS\ new
heedqwirters for the division.
The primary benefit to Long Beach
children will be the establishment of a
special residency program between
the university and the ~ital.
University resident doctors will be
trat.ned at Memorial.
FKUJty from the u n i v t r 8 i t y ' g
department ol pediatrics will io m
Memorial to provide teaching ex--
perien<:e for the 35 hospital Intern~
and residents and the regular medical
stall
DAILY PILOT
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and the community well on numerous
occasions during a difficult, four-year
period of transition."
She read from a plaque. prepared on
her instructions·
.. We ha ve a dynamic. well balanced
community ... thanks to you for a dlf-
ncult job performed in an exemplary
manner"
Mrs. Marshall then presented the
plaque to Gruber.
"'Paul," she said. "we know )'<>U put
ln four years of very hard work that
had great demand~ on your time.
thought and energies and it meant a
re11I. personal ucrlfke to you."
She also gave the ex·mayor a
mounted gavel.
''I'm deeply moved," saJd Gruber.
' Thjs is a genuine SUTprlse. I believe r
blinked a Little bit."
He had -&nd the partially CiUed
council chambers resounded with ap-
plause.
Gruber slowly walked back to his
seat.
But before settling down, be put the
mounted gavel out of sight.
"We need only one ~avel at these
meetings ," he exp I a 1 n e d, mean-
ingfully.
Into Florida
TALLAHASSEE. Fla. IUPI) -The
~earch for the slayer oC Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. has taken another
mysterious twist and was turned
toward Florida today.
Leg1slatlon which would expand
state laws prohlbltlng secret city coun-
cil meetings was denounced Monday
night u ''horrible" by Newport Beach
City Atty. Tully Se)inour.
Tbe proposed legislation. Assembly
Bill 202, would amend and broeden the
exbting Ralph M. Brown Act.
"It's horrible," Seymour reported to
councUmen. "It's one of the worst bills
t.o come along ln a dee.de.''
meetings, fonnial and informal.
Two weeb ago. lt wu puled by the
Auembly, 41-33. State Senate action is
expected in two or three weeb, ac-
cording to Seymoor.
''It's a stupid bill," said ttie dty at.
torney. ''It means that everytime two
comdee members sit down, they
have to call the newspapers. It'• tile
same with committees of ooe, w1len
they meet with the city ttatr.
Testimony To Be Heard
On Leaseback Curb Bill
The FBI Monday night issued a
pickup order for prime suspect Eric
Starvo Galt and asked that it be
transmitted to all law enforcement
agencies in Florida. The order said
Galt was wanted for '"civil rights con-
spiracy" and had used the aLiases o!
Harvey Lowmyer and John Willard.
It made no mention or James Earl
Ray. the 40-year-old escapee from the
Missouri State Prison whom FBI
Director J. Edgar Hoover said
fingerprints had proved was the same
person as Galt. "Ray and Galt are
identical." Hoover sai11 last week.
The meuure was authored by
Assemblyman James A. Hayes (R·
Long Beach). It would compel all city
council committff1. subcommlttees
and 1dvliory bodiee to notify the press
at leaat 24 hours ln .ci~ce of all
FroBI P .. e l
ANNEX .••
''I don't know who's really behind
it," he said. "except the publiaben.
Whatever t.he motivation, It would
se"erely hamper, and probebly put an
end to the committee appro1ch in
municipal aovernmenL"
Seymour noted that when the
Aasembly voted, Robert Badbam <R·
Newport Beach), "bad the counge to
vote against It."
. But JD09t legislators, be uid, ~
apparently fearful "of the organized
power of tt1e press."
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of Ille OlllY ~llol 11111
La guna Beach City Manager Jam es
D. Wheaton. will testify Wednesday in
favor of an assembly bill that would
Return Overdue
Books; No Fine
In Library \\'eek
In honor or NatiON1 Library Weet. au books. no matter how Ion!? over-
due, may be returned to any branch
of the Newport Beach City Library.
free of fines an<I •·no q uestlons asked."
accordlne to Mrs. Dorothea She!iely.
city librarian.
"We're doing this," she said, "be·
cause books are more Important than
money and we want to have all the
books oo the shelves."
Programs have been p I a n n e d
throughout the city to oeliebrate library
~k. including the dedkatioo of the
new library station at the BIUffs
Community Room fOT children who
art! "loo Car away from the public
libraries."
Dedication ceremonic~ will be held
Thursday from 2 t.o 4 p.m. at the! sta-
tion, with ~st speaker Ellen Harris.
drama writer. author and former New
York actres3.
The station will be open every Thurs-
day from 2 to 4 p.m.
Also during the week. programs
have been scheduled for studel'lts of
St. Jame.s School, Queea of Antels
School and various public schools
throughout the area.
Coeds to Present
Dance Exhibition
Twenty Orange Coast College coed~
wiU present a dance and gymnastics
exhibition at 9 a.m. Friday. May 3. In
the Newport Harbor High School gym-
nasium.
Perform in~ for an all-girl assembly.
lhe coeds Will perfoTm a '°"umber of
modem and Interpretative dances and
gymnastic dance exercises as a team.
The program is under tbe direcUon
of Lynda Davi.c; aod Dorothy Dud-
dridge of the OCC Dance Department.
The FBI in Miami refused cogiment.
Earlier Monday, the FBI in W'ashing-
put the brakes on gr11wine use of lease ton clamped a lid on any public pro-gress report on the manhunt. The purch83e for municipal projects. policy wu expected to prevail until a
The bill. AB 499. and a broader suspect is captured or some dramatic
Constitutional amendment have betn ne·v development occurs.
introduced by Assembly R o b e r t Ray was placed on the list of the
Badham (R·Newport Beach). FBl's 10 most wanted criminals Satur-
Tbey would require that a simple day, and alerts have been issued ln
majority of the electorate and a two-Canada and Mexico as weU as the
thirds of the leglslative body (four United States.
members of a five-man council or SECOND ALERT
board) approve the proposal. The Florida alert was the state's se-
Lease purchase has been us~ cond in 12 days for Galt. On April 11,
many cities to avoid a genenl obllga-thP. day a white Mustang car
lion bond election which requires a -~egistered lo Galt was follDd aban-
two-thlrd.s "Yes" vot~ for pasaage. ~ooed in AUnnta, the FBI issued a
The lease purchase or leaseback "locate and observe" order for Galt in
method. frequently controversial as in Florida. About five hours later, it was
the case of the Anaheim Stadium or canceled and the FBI Indicated later
Laguna's own pending main beach the order was a mlstake.
purchase. is an a d m i n i s t r a t i. v e A Miami police ofllcial was skep-
decision that maybe made by a ma-t1cal .or the current alert's failure to
jority of ttle governing body without men tion Ray's name.
an election. "Maybe In about another week the
Wheaton said he plans to confer with correction ·wm catch up with the
Badbam on possible changes in the bill message," he said.
before testifying before the Committee ~ federal warrant charging con-
on Municipal a.nd County Government. spt.racy bas. been lssued against Galt
The bill. said Wheaton, grew out of and police in Memphis. Tenn., where
Laguna's situation. Councilmen were King was slain by a wh~te sniper April
advised J.ast year that it would be ii· A, have charged Galt Wltil murder.
legal to hold a special election to learn The . FBI alert advised "Caution :
if more than 50 percent of lhe vO(er" Galt is sought in connection with
favoT lease purchase acquisition llf thl' mur~er. whereJn the victim was shot.
beach since the matter was an ad· Consider ltlm armed and dangerous."
mlnistratlve decision. It described Galt as white, 36 years
The Badham bill would require a old. 5-8 to 5-10 in height. with. blue or
special election but would be free of h~zel eyes and brown hair One
the two-thirds yes vote requirement dis~ingu.ishlng m~, the FBI sajd. is a
of general obligation bond elections. noticeably pTotruding left ear.
. Wheaton s~id he doubted that tbe LONE WOLF bill. as wr1tten, would apply to
Laguna's Main Beach purchase plans.
The bill talks about cities and leasP
purchase of buildings while I.he beach
matter is esscntiaUy a land ac-
quisition. This. however. could be
modified.
The wording of Badtiam's proposed
constitullonal amendment is bro:ider.
It refers to county government as well
and Includes leaseback of sites h we1I
as buildings.
Wheaton said the Badham legisla·
tion is being opposed by both the
Cali!ornia League or C1Ues and tho
County Supervisors Association of
Calilorn1a.
Wheaton said he felt such controls
are a moral obligation since the elec·
torate concerned wbl be responsible
for paying oU bonds under a leue
purchase agreement as they are under
a general obligation bond measure.
The FBI alert sald Galt 'is
reportedly a lone woU and allegedly
attended a dance instruction school
and bas reportedly completed a course
In bartending."
In Los Angeles. the FBJ was
reported trying to find a blonde
woman wtio was dating James Earl
Ray before Ray disappeared from
Southern CaJlforoia.
payers wltti their developments.
"Newport Center will go a long way
toward subsidizing our bou.slng as far
aa scbool cost.a are concerned." he
a.aid. "Fashion Island b• no children.
but 1t pay1 scbool taxes. And we're not
complaining. That's part ol the balan-
cing aystem."
He Mid the 212.acre annexation area
will produce larger achoo! t a x
revenues than the Newport·Mesa
District at large.
"As for 1 n a y 1I11 1 Irvine
developments, ii there were a ••Y to
take all ol tbem totebter -~
Ual, industrial and COIDllMftiaJ -and
put them into ooe private ICbeol
district, we would men ... pay our own way. You wwkl Dlld tti.t tbe
Irvine Co. wou.Jd be better off."
He concluded by noting that there
htK! been "six years ol dilcuasion''
wttb Pease and other past and present
s<:bool oUidals on the subject of a
financing system more equitable than
the present property tax procedure.
"We haven't found one in thoee six
years," he said, "and we don't think
that delaying this annexation another
90 days, as proposed by Mr. Pease,
would make much dlfference."
Councilman Robert Shelton summed
up for his colleagues:
"The only fair and real solution to
our clessroom shortage problem Is to
go hard and fast with tbe traditional
method -and that's a successful bond
issue. I'd rather we bend our efforts
and energies to deal with the total pro-
blem in that equitable way."
On Shelton's motion the annexalt.on
was approved.
Killed in Pla ne Crash
TORONTO ( UPl) -A Canadian
Broadcast.log Corp. {CBS) television
news reporter and three other men
were killed e.arly today when their
two-engine plane crashed whUe ap-
proaching ToTonto Jnter:iationaJ Air-
port.
(The DAil. Y PILOT haa ta.ken no
position as yet on the meuure.)
Councilmen, at Seymour's 1ug-
gestlon. agreed lo .ipport t h e
California League of Cttie11' opposition
t.o the bill.
"What this is," said Seymour later
"is a ~st of strength between ~
newa publisbere and city and county
governments. And I'm afraid tbat the
bill will be pused by the Senate, too frankly, II I
Industry Review
Program Slated
By Mesa Chamber
Industry and it& place Ill Orqe eoa.t oommurdties will be reviewed
Wedoesda1 when the COlta Mete and
Newport Harbor Chamber 0( Com-
merce women'<S divisions meet at the
Costa Mesa GoU and Country Club.
The joint meeting will begin •t noon
and featw"e four speakers r~eeen
ting Harbor Area mamdactwiog aod
industry, a<:cording to spokesmen.
They include Ray H. Heller, vlef'
president and gMel"al manager of
Babcock Electronics: Aerospa ce
Di visioo: Vaughn Redd.ing, maneier
of tndus.triat relations for Oadilla<:
Gage: Terry Doyle. maDa,'ter Of con-
sumer relations for tbe Philco F<rd
Aeronull'onic Divis)on and Paul White,
construction project d.lreotoc tot
Collins Radio .
Redding was recently appointed to
head ttie C09lla Mesa Chamber of
Oonunerce's indu9Crial committee.
Deadline for making Teservatfoog to
attend the joint meet:iog is 5 p.m. to-
da)', aocontirlg to Mrs. DeMurl Tosh,
president ol tile Costa Meise chamber
WOIMn 'S division.
A guided toor ol the C<* Mua
civic center and police fecility will
follow tk lundleon m~.
THE ULTIMATE
Girl Scouts Spread Word
On Landscaping Projects
In CARPET CLEANINC>
THIS UNIQUE NEW PROCESS CLEANS DEEP
AND YET TREATS THE FINEST CARPETS WITH
LOVING CARE .••
·-ITIAM ,..__ .. .._ ~,. .I ... ..,_ _. ,.. ...,. ...................................... .... .................... _,.. ,.., n.= ""
Corona del M.ar Girl Scouts are
trooplllr au over their nelgJ'lborhoods
to btJp ral• money for a men beau.
Uful Corona deJ Mar.
~ girls are distributing some
2.000 bandbtU to reetdtne.. aslllng
thens to corttrlbute to the clwnbtt's
ttd!c ta1tnd landlcapln1 proiram,
aCt'Ordlftg to John Semple. chabinan
0( the chamber's beautl.OcaUon com·
ml UM.
Mtrcbanu have been and a.re chJp-
Ptnc lnto the progam. whJcl\ calls for
the tnstallation of one Coa t mstiway
"Oowerbed" 1 year for lbt 1oext four
years l
r lvt al.rutty hav,. been put ln. with
tM merch•11t~ and bml~smen pay.
Int Mf'•tfllrd ol lht C011t. the city ~
M'\t.
.Beautllic~tlon of ttch Island, W<:lud-~. flo~. ltoond COWl' andP.JCC•
sional palms. cosl• about ~.oon.
Semple sa.id merchant contribution'
to the protrom amount to 20 cents per
frontage foot of their places or bui;i-
ness. Resident! are belnlf a8ked to
donate 10 ceots a front.ace foot. That's
about M ~l' property.
But the cbambtr wW .W. for Miss.
A!Sything o(fmd will be gratlfully
reetivtd. Mid chamber apokesmtn.
The pampbletl belna dlstrlboted by
Girl Seouta coattJnt an editorial ttiat
apPMrtd ln the DAILY Plt.01' llat Ju.nt. 'nw point of the edttortaJ was
that Corona dtl Mar b one of the ~t
con~lstefltb' Jovel,y communltJta In
Calllonlla ''btcauae betutiflca.Uon 1,
more tban 1 1'ord to most of Its prop-
trtv ownen. It ts • way ol Ufe."
Checks for tht tratnc Wand land·
'capln~ prop-am may be mtdt pay-
"ble to Corooa del Mar BtluUtul, P. 9
Box 72, Corona dtl Mar. ,,_
ITIAM ,-.... ....... -_..,_ 11•1 _,Me . ... , ...... ,... _.. ,, ...... n. .... fw ........
C'''4-'••11 ................. -..... .. ~ ... _.. ...................... _,_ ...... ...... ....
~
THlS Ollft STIAM PlltOCIS.S IS OUAltANTllD TO II COMPLITIL Y SA,_ OH ALL
PAlllttCS UNDllt ALL CONDITIONS.
WHIM YOU
WANT THI ~INISTCALL
RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
,. ..
ISTIMATI
Our 21st Y Mr of 5-mce in the Orang• County ettcf lo"9 ... ch ArN&
2950 RANDOi.PH COST A MESA
PHONi M6.l4l2 ALSO IN LOHO llACH 19'0 CHUltY AVf.
.......... .... ----..... -
----· ...... . ·-----·· -
-Tax Boost· for
Big 'A' Stadium?
Red lleslrtf
First Iron Curtain country lo
enter the Miss U n i v e r a e
Pageant is Yugoslavia and this
brunette beauty, Daliborka
Stojsic will be her co_untry's
representative, measunng 36-
23-36 and at 5'6" she tilts scales
at 118 pounds.
Mesa Athlete
Wins 1st Round
In Draft Suit
A former Costa Mesa High School
basketball star who turned in his draft
card during an antiwar demonstration
today bas won at least a momentary
victory In his fight against military in·
duction.
Pacifilt Stephen Turley, 20, of 2016
Wallace Ave., won a preliminary in.
junction issued by a U.S. District
J udge Monday in Loi Angeles.
The cowt's injunction postpones
Turley's induction until alter a May 7.0
hearing on the youth's suit against the
U.S. government.
He contends the induction orders
violate his right to free speech and due
process of law. The American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) ls defending
him in the case.
Turley sa~ be sUITendered his dralt
card during a war protest rally led by
Dr. Benjamin Spock and was aubse·
quenUy re-classified 1-A 1 a s t
November.
At the time, he was a fresman stu·
dent at Dartmouth College, New
Hampshire. studying full time on a
student deferment.
His suit asks that the 1-A classifica·
tion be voided. his induction order be
permanently halted and the regula·
tions be declared unconstitlutional
Urban League Studies
Black Ghetto Problen1
NEW YORK (UPI) -The National
Urban League meets in emergency
session this weekend to djscuss taking
a more militant role in the nation's
black ghettos. informed souces said
Monday.
About 200 staff members and direc-
tors of local affiliates acrost tile COllll·
try are expected to attend the con-
ference Saturday and Sunday in
Manhattan's Commodore Hotel.
•
Orange County Assessor Andrew J.
Hlnsbaw today iJ embroiled in another
dispute which bis office says was not
of hla making.
Hinshaw bas informed the city of
Anaheim that he will change assess·
ment procedures on Anaheim Stadium
which could cost the city more than
f'SQ,000 in county taxes next fiscal
year.
Anaheim City Manager Keith Mur·
doch bu reacted to Hlnsbaw's action
with planl to appeal the "possessory
intereat'' usessment to the Board of
Supervisors and the courts, if neces·
aary.
Possessory interest as defined by
Hinshaw is the interest of a private
entity in government owned property.
In this case the private entity is the
Anaheim Stadium Non-Profit Corp ..
the city's leaseback agency for the
stadium and its parking area.
Nuc"lear Test
Set Despite
Hughes Plea
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Brushing
aside objections from aides of in-
dustrialist H o w a r d Hughes, the
Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) to·
day readied Friday's explosion of a
giant thermonuclear device under the
Nevada desert
Robert Maheu, Hughes' top ex-
ecutive in Nevada, Monday asked for
a 90-day moratorium on the test. He
proposed an "independent study" to
size up the explosion from the view-
points of damage lo underground
water, radioactivity, and relationship
with earthquakes.
However. AEC Chairman Glenn
Seaborg replied that the test was
necessary for progre55 in weapons
development. Seaborg added that all
safety aspects had been checked.
In Las VegM, an AEC spokesman
said delay of the test. the largest
underground shot in U.S. bl.story,
would have an adverse effect on na-
tional defense.
Concern of the Hughes organization
over the matter follows in the wake of
extensive acquisition of Nevada pro-
perty by the industrialist in recent
months.
The belated effort to postpone
Friday's test might mark the begin·
ning of a drive to get the larger un·
de.rground explosions moved out of
Nevada. A site in the Aleutian Islands
oU Ala5ka already is under AEC con·
sider a.ti on.
Maheu claimed that even if the big
shots were conducted elsewhere, there
would be no adverse effects on
Nevada's economy. He said "the same
steady ri.se in the level of spending"
would continue from smaller bomb
tests.
Maheu claimed the Hughes group
had received "a large number of
messages from highly qualified people
throughout the nation" supporting the
moratorium. He implied that Hughes
would pay for the "independent"
survey.
The AEC plans to trigger the device
at 6 a.m. Friday at the foot of a 3,800·
foot shaft sunk in the Nevada desert
about 120 mJles northeast of Las
Vegas, and ~ miles east of the
Nevada town of Beatty.
ll will have a minimum force of one
megaton -equivalent to a million
tons of TNT. The AEC has warned
that groond tremors may be felt in a
four-sctate area 250 miles around the
test site.
Caught Napping
14 Nude Hippies .Asleep in Ditch
From Wire Sttvtce1
A bizarre Soutbland pilgrimage by
14 San Frandaco bippel -aoe of
wtiom gave birth to a bouncinl baby
boy while bounclnC atone ill a stolen
bus -has come to an umcbeduled end
in Oxnard.
Ventura <Mlnty Sheriff's SCl Ol~
Fisher <tiscoV«'ed tbe termiaul Mon.-
day in Dee:-Canyon. alollC Padfie
Coan aigbWttf, 12 miles loaCb ol tbt
Ventura County~ tow9.
At first. be ~ It ,... a tNDc
diluter. Tbe bul bid l'lrdled tr*> • 4tdl ud
14 bodies 1-y ~ aiJout the
grHl7 IQl'T'OUDdlael, pint -wldte flellh glesriJni ln .,. beam ot Filber'•
na.sbU~. The bodies were nude.
Flsher J&id be awtened 1be pvty
and was told the ~had acne ol.f CM
roed by acddent md it teemed M
aood a place u any to bed down for
the night. A records d>eclc ~ted the bus
had betn stolen 11 dityt bdare from
San Frycisco·a lfalOll • A I h b u r 'I ~
dlatrict, 80 tt>e group was ordered to
dress and taken to beadquarten fQr
investtgatioo.
''Watt."~ one woman who iden-
tified he~lf .as Ma.TY Bruner, 1.3, "my
baby's on the bus."
Miu Bruner . who said her only ad·
dre• was the bus. but that her
pareota live in Madison. Wis., bundled
up the week.old baby and tl'.le unusuel
dMgadon wu on ita .vay.
ODca Ile gr-.up aniffd, Miss
Bruner •• booted oo sutpicloD of en· ~ ttle Uf• <w health of a child
ad .. beby Wllll taken to Ventura
OowKy General HotpttM. •
1be Mlf.procWr:Md leader of the
~ odyney, O.Z.les W. Manson,
WU booked OC1 SUfPICIOll of grand theft
1n ~ wWI Ile atole.n bus, and
OD auapidon ot carryihg a tradulent
drtver's license.
Set. Fitber laid Maoeon carried a
driver's license al.~ giving his Dame
at Charle1 Maddox. Tbree othtr
travti«a ws. bOok~ oo identical
char1ea and t-.o more were held oo
IUspidoa cC ~17 coaduc:t.
Hinshaw says he ts baaing his new
assessment procedure on a recent
court cue involving a San Franct.co
parking lot owned by the city and
leased to a non profit corporation.
Hlnshaw's office believes the caae
will probably go to the court for lbW
decision.
»-YEAR.OLD BIPLANE LOOKS LIKE TOY CONTRASTED WITH MODERN JET
Rebuilt 1911 O.Havllland Takes off from San Fr1nclaco to Retrace AJrm1ll Route
"There seems to be enough iray
area ln the San Franclsco caM to re--
quire that a judicial decision be ren·
dered," said J .P. Vall8rga, Hinshaw'•
chief deputy.
Mail Biplalle Flies Again.
Murdoch and Anaheim City Attoniey
Joseph Geisler said Monday that they
were ''upset" by Hinshaw's action.
Rebuilt 1918 Model Retracing 1st Continenrol Route
Geisler says he feels the San Fran-
cis<:o parking Jot decision differs from
the local situation. He also noted that
legislation is pending in Sacramento
to except public bodies from posses·
sory Interest assessments.
"In San Francisco. the title o! the
land rested with the nonprofit cor·
poration." Geisler explained. "Here
the city owns the property."
Anaheim o!flclala are· not interested
1n additional costs being heaped on
their stadium property. Last year the
city lost over $520,000 when net profit
after operation expenditures was
about '6a:l,OOO and the bond payment
they had to make on the original cost
of the structure was $1.l million.
RENO, Nev. <UPJ)-With the snowy
Sierra Nevada behind him, pilot Bill
Hackbarth ~leers his vintage biplane
acT06s Nevada's high desert today
along the nation's first transcontinen·
the Ainn ail route.
The 67-ye.u -old pllot kept one eye on
the steaming radiator of his rebuilt
1918 De Havilland DH4 and the other
on mountain tops Monday while flying
from San Francisco to Reno.
Today he chugs off for Elko, Nev .•
on the third le2 of his cross-country
flight to the Smithsonian Institution at
Washington, D.C., where the DH4 will
be enshrined in memory of the old
U.S. Airmal Service.
No Early Talks
About 80 mlnutes aft.er loeaving San
Francisco, Hackbarth refueled the
single-engine, wood and canvas bi·
plane at Sacramt!llto. He also tinkered
with the DeHavilland's troubleaome
radiator.
The radiator began st.earning afttt
Hackbarth completed the one hour, 20-
minute hop from Sacramento to Reno.
Hackbarth, who was a mechanic
with the U.S. Airmail Service after
World War I, began his transcontlnen·
tal flight nearly two weeks behind
schedule due to mechanical prob~ms
and bad weather. He left his home at
Santa Paula. Calif., last Friday on a
JOO.mile llight to San Francis<» but
was Coroed to spend two daya at Mo-
desto because of a leaky radlat.or.
A truck loaded with spare par1' for
the historic aircraft baa been follow-
ing Hackbarth.
Hackbarth and others apeot three
years reconstructing the DeHaville.nd.
which had crashed in 1922 on a mouia-
tabiside near Salt Lake City while on
a mail run. It can travel at 100 mllel
an hour at full throttle.
Inside the plane'• open cockpit,
Hackbarth alts in a black windbreaker
and vintage Oylng helmet, much the
same as airmail pilots did halt a cen·
tury ago.
Third F-111 Jet
Reported Down
In Thailand
Hope Dim in Phone Strike
WASHINGTON (AP) -Hopes ap-
peared dim for renewed negotiations
anytime soon in the nationwide strike
of some 200,000 telephone workers as
union attQrneys sought to upset an
Alabama court injunction against the
walkout.
strike have refused to cross picket
lines of the instaners in most states,
including Alabama and Kentucky.
The union has rejected a company
offer to raise wages 7.S percent over
18 months. Company officia:l.s said the
Ulion is demanding 10.5 percnet.
Telephone installers now average
$3.27 per bour and Bell S)'IWn
employes, including o p e rat o r a ,
repairmen. linemen and cl e r k s ,
average $2.79.
SAIGON (AP) -Another U.S. Air
Force Flll fighter-bomber crashed
Mooday nigtt wrule on its way to or
from a bombing missioo against North
Vielllam. but thil U.S. Command sald
it was believed d<>wn somewhere in
Thailand.
The command said it bad no other
information on the plane or its two
crewmen.
"There's nothing to report" on the
prospect for new wage talks, a
spokesman for the striking ~FL-ClO
Communications Workers said Mon·
day.
Still No Mayor in Grove; . It was the third of America's most
advanced warplanes to era.sh in the
V.lietnam theater s~ &ix ot the '6
million, swlng-wirlg aircraft arrived at
an air base fn 'Jlheiland Maren 17.
There bas been n<> f o r m a 1
hargalning alnce the strike began six
days ago in some 40 states.
Company spokesmen said telephone
service -mostly automated -re·
mained largely unaffected by the
strike.
Both Nominees Defeated
The second o! the previous crashes
was in northern ThaHand on March 28.
The crew was rescued and the
wreckage recovered. That crash was
attributed to a capsule of seating
material getting lodged in the Clight
controls.
The first plane that crashed. on
March 25, is believed to have gone ·
down in a remote S«tion of Thailand
also.
Followl.Dg the first two crashes, the
othet' four Fills were grounded until
two replacements were flown from
Newda. The squadron resumed com·
bat missfons against North Vietnam
April 12 and have been bombing every
night since then.
A U.S. spokesman said the Fllls
flew four missions against Nortt\ Viet.
nam's panhandle Monday night. but he
would not siay how macy planes were
on each mission.
. In tbe ground war, South Viet-
namese infantry reported 115 Viet
Cong killed In a battle 20 Jhiles south
of Saigon Monday. but ttiere was no
sign of the maj<r eMmy &Ua<:k on the
capital feared by the South Viet-
o&mese.
The South Vietnamese said troops of
their 7tta Inf&lltry Division fought for
an hour witb a Viet Cong unit of
unknown s:ize in the Mekoog Delta.
Seven Souat Vietnamese w e r e
repomd. killed and 47 wounded.
The Alabama injunction applied only
to the approximately 8.000 strikers in
that state but CWA President Joseph
A. Beirne said the state court order
blocked any early possibility of set.
tling the nationwide walkout.
The Alabama strikers continued to
ignore the injunction, issued Saturday
by Circuit Judge James A. Hare of
Dallas county, wrule union lawyers
sought t.o have the case transferred to
federal court in Mobile.
The case was placed on the oocket
of U.S. Disbict Court there.
A similar union legal strategy suc-
ceeded Monday in Kentucky, where
Federal Judge James Gordon voided a
state injunction and said the Southern
Bell Phone Co. would have to seek
some other remedy such as a sult for
damages if it felt lt had any valid com·
plaint against the union.
Southern Bell, which obtained both
the Alabama and Kentucky state court
orders. contended its employes were
illegally refusing to cross the picket
lines of telephone installers.
The strike Communications Workers
include 23,000 telephone installers
employed around the country by
Wester Electric Co., a Bell subsidiary,
and about 140,000 Bell T~lephone
System workers in JS states where
their contracta have expired.
Many Bell workers not d.lrect.ly on
H you're casting a
wider shadow these days
you could be in trouble
A second effort Monday to elect a
mayor of Garden Grove failed when
newly elected Councllman John Dean
refused to vote for either Of the
nominees.
Councilman Lou1s Lake nominated
Councilman Kathryn Barr but she lost
3-2 with Councilman Reece Ballard,
Laurence Schmit, and Dean voting
against her.
Schmit's nomination of Ballard was
also in vain as another 3-2 "no" vote
developeci.
Before voting, the council went into
secret executive session to discuss
nominations. Ballard refused to take
part, arguing that the sessioii was a
violation of the state's public meeting
access law, the Brown I ct.
Schmit agreed but r e I u c t a n t I Y
participated in the closed meeting.
City Atty. Willard Pool said, in his
opinion, the session was legal.
Former Mayor George Honold.
recenUy defeated in reelection bid for
bis council seat. said he agreed with
Ballard that the session should be
open . The council had previously failed to
elect a Garden GrJve mayor last
Tuesday. Another attempt to elect a
People in our "Streu Society" laid to over-indulge
a.nd u a result overweight and high blood pressure
are common problems. If you're in your 40's or .SO's
the odds are high you have one or both of these
probmts. If you id.;ntify yourself with this group
you'd be wise to do something about it. Like
getting regular check-up~. finding out your limits,
and sticking to them. If you've boen thinking about
life insurance, and disco"ercd that the cost in your
J, L tte ......... C.L.U.
cue is high, or even difficuit to get, Manufacturers
Life may be able to help. We have always believed
Astncy Anodett
HUNTINGTON 8EAC9
Tel: ~7·5621
lttMJ.T.....,
Apncy~
NEWPORT IEACat
Ttt: ~7-5621
that lfl'e iMUl'ance should be available to the larges~ . .
group of people possible and at the lowest possible pnoc. You will find
the Man from Manufacturers well qualified and helpful in yout selection
of a plan to suit your particular needs. Call him soon.
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
TNSUJtANa COMPANY
mayor was scheduJed for thJs ef.
ternoon.
Pool told the council the courts
"won't allow the business of the city to
st.op because you couldn 't agree on a
mayor." But he added that the mayor
must sign the ofCicial papers of the
city by Jaw.
Said Dean. who alone seemed
capable of naming the city's mayor,
"This council has been split before and
I will not break the deadlock by taking
either aide."
Marines Launch
Training Exercise
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Navy &!Id
Marine exercise "Beagle Leash"
began today oU the S o u t b e r n
cailfornia coast.
Forty ships, 25 air units and 7,000
Marines were taking part ill the ex·
erci!e which runs through May 1.
Highlights include the firing cf
surface-to-air missiles at drone aerial
targets. an amphibious landing at
Camp Pendleton, and live rocket and
bombing attackJ against targets In the
San Clemente and Chocolate Mountain
impact ranges.
•
----------------------------------------------------------........ ._j .... ____ ..,. ______ ........................... -. ........... .-.._ ......... ~----'>'
'
. •
DAl\.Y PJLOT
:... ~ ........ ...., ·!-
::: Salt Lake City police revealed ':that they will match photographs
• ~.t~era in the future Defore g a release. Police Capt. ~.; i· Robert• aaid a jailer called . •• ' e ~e of.· a prisoner to be : ed.· J•~, ,,.kh91••. l(atro_?,, ·• •J>f Denver, · ~~r. i4entlfi~ 1 lf a& the: m4Ht ·and was aJ.. to w&lk out of the jail._ The
te 1~ted for release was as·
.on a cot. ' . J .. n Bueklend, mother of
T~, Aptll ?31 1968
10 Million
Go Hungry,
Report Says
WASHINGTON (AP) -A new
repart gy1 that in the Deep South, in
~ E= OD ~ reaenatlou, in Aptp -In every section of
the nation -at 1eest 10 million
Amedcant l\lffer unremlttlng hunger
and the number of victims ls growtng.
They suffer anemia, growth retard•·
tion and parasitic dtaeasea usually
found in underdeveloped countries, the
report said. And tbeJt infants often are
fed water instead of mllk. while their
aged 'luffer dizzy IJ>tlls tl:'bm 1nu1ot.
• "No other Weat.ern country permits
such a large proportion ol its people to
endure the lives we press on our
poor," tbe report said. "To make fo'ur-
flftht of a nation more affluent than
any other people in history. we have
degraded one-fifth mercilessly.'' ·
• I
.children, simply got tired of
erin~ the· frop~ dqor. wJlen her
'• young b18Dda came ~ ecessity ~lua Mom equals m-
on: A giant blackboard now
=--~ on tb~ front lawn. detailing
daily aot:lvitie1 and wflere-
pf '1J ~· kicb~ The result .......... 1uom ls ble18ec1 silence.
The report, made public Monday .bY
the CiUUI1$' llc1ard of Inquiry into
Hllnl'S' and Malmltrition in the United
Stat.es. urged President Johnson to
declare that a national emergency ex-
iltl and to launch emergency food pro-
grams in~ bard.tilt countlet, as well
.. m.tcant farm campe and some In-
d.lln Nlervatiom. ·
Celefwate• 40th Bi·rtladay Today
• It alao recommended establishing a
free food-stamp program and atri}>-png the Agriculture Departmet:lt of
retpC11116billty for food aid because it
p1acel "'the interests of egricultural JhdUcen fint, tbe needs of the poor
and blmgry .econd. ..
Shirley Temple Black. shown at the age of 7 In a
1936 file photo, will celebrate her 4-0th birthday
today. Jn the picture, above right, she shows that
her political ambitions are as alive today as be-
fore her defeat last year in her campaign for elec-
tion to Congress. The former child-movie star
made that clear at a news cOnfennce held Mon-
day in connection with the annual Republican
Women's Conference in Washington, D.C.
'nlt retpO!'t laid only 5.4 miWon of
the estimated 30 mfll1on persons in
poverty rteelve 1UrPlu1 commoctitiea
or food .tamps under c u r r e n t
Agriculture Department programs.
And. it added. one-third of those
receiving the government aid still
have a poor diet -according to
Agriculture Department standards.
JaTits Questions Nixon Poll
Says Ex-VP's Strength Won't Affect Rocky Drive
· 11Wb.U. Albtrt o/ Bu1'.bank r,. n.cw U.. mood of iupporltrs who ~ 11p in enth1Ufclm what tAty
Zccktd in rizt as thtV gathfrtd to
gteet Sen. Robert Kennedy. Bo~btl
t.0tl$ making hi! ucond campaign
stOing through Southern California
to. spealc bf/err• the Los Angelu
"Town Holl" and in Son Diego. •
.. , 4 .U.ction of 1to1A gum
~Nldu~mIM Ctrrlt08 Municipal Court t:a8ts
won't be introduced after au,
it appeor1. Thttl were rectnU1/
~ stolen by burglars.
• Kenneth Mlchael Dunnlne, ot
Redondo Beach, celebrated hi.a
first birthday Monday • . • but
only becauae of a fast rescue S'Qn..
day when he· fell from King Har-
bor dock intO 20 feet of water. ma:
parents were visiting the 35-foot
catamaran of 'his grandfather,
John Dawaon, when hi! stroller
roUed off the dock into the water.
His father, Robert Dunnln9, and
two friends dove into the water.
On the third dive, his father was
able to pull the child onto the
dock. · ·
•• • 1 bad enough '1fhen you are
arind, but even worse when own ·vehicl• ii used to do the
'!;.aurll~s ,m{ld~ -otf with '9.000
rm of Jror.en· 1brl*11>, king c:rab. 4Job~r talli Morid•yJrom M-dy's•,r.r. Martcet~·The1111ms car ...
rfed oH Ul.9 tja}l in market owner
Andy fll1toh1ch'1 pickup tnlct.
"We cannot assume that any of the
remaining poor -those on neither
proeram -are getting enough food , 11
the repcrt said.
Co-cbabineb of tl'le citizens' group
are Benjamin E. Mays. retired presi-
dent of Morehouse College, Atlanta.
Ga., and Leslie W. Dunbar, director of
the Field Foundation, New York.
The report said the 256 counties re-
quiring immedkate food programs are
in 20 1tates -moit in the South and
Southwest -with 47 of them in
Georgl.a.
William Burson. Georgia WeUare
director, commented on the report:
"Al bed u the situation is 1n Georgia, lt'• not aa bad u the committee
painted it." .
Arizonp ()f ficial
Hits Bridge Plan
As 'Coney Island'
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -The
ehMnnen of ttMl' AriJIOOa State Parks
.Bowd Mid Monday he fears that
relooation ol ~ famed London Bridge
at lJlke Havasu City will create a
''Coney Jeland .tmo.pflere."
Bert F~man of Phoenix declared.
that the briqe probebly would attl'act
''drOYea of vi&Jtora" tlDd would be
detrimental to an adjoining ~ park.
He ~d the state park area at Lake
Havat!IU Cl.ty ii mainly oriented to out-
door eports of fillhiDC. ni.mming,
boat:l.nc, Cll1Dping and wter skiing.
McCulloch Corp.. developer of a
large real estiate tract at ~e Haviasu
City, amoonced plans last week to
purchase the bridge ..i move all.
10,000 toos of it to 1be rem ax-ea
~by atone, It would b e.
reC001truet.ed over • dlamlel to be cut
across & peoin$ula on ~ Ile
development la located.
: Fireman oonctded tbllt otber pare
bolrd me~n lffm to approvoe of
the brfd&e prGjtcl
WSHJNGTON (AP) -Republican
Sen. Jacob K. Javits challenges the
results of a national optmon poll in-
dicating Richard M. Nixon could
defeat any of the three leading poten-
tial Democratic presidential nominees.
Javi ta said in an lntenil,w tti,t this
sampling of potential voter1 will not
aHect efforts being made (o get his
feUow New Yorket, Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller. actively into. the race to
oppose Nixon for the Republican
presidentJ al nomination.
Nixon's aides were so elated by the
Gallup Poll results that they called the
survey to the attention ol newsmen.
"I think the poll which ahowa Nlxon
could defeat the Democrats represents
a fraainent&tion of the Democratic
atreng1h among three candldates,"
Javits said. "It does ~ ti>
demonatrate that he could bfit a
Ulgle-Democr,atic nominet wbb bad
his party united-behind him.
"Of course It's better from ~on's
etandpoUlt Ula& the poll .abowtf. ~ a '
winner rather than a loser. But in
terms of the fenenl electioo, 1 don't
think it means anything," said Javits.
Nixon, who bas been fighting to shed
the "can't win" tag pnned on hl m
alter the 1960 presidential and 1962
California gubernatorial election. got
Central, V.S. Feels Brunt of Natural Onslaut!ht
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a political lift out of the poll whlch
matched him indivldualLy with Sens.
Eugene J . McCarthy and Robert F.
Kennedy announced Democratic can-
didates, and Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey, who ls expected to an-
nounce Saturday.
In the Republican camp, Nixon
reported '8t Cheyenne, Wyo., Monday
that he is picking up considerable
second·round strength in states with
favorite.son candldates.
These non-primary states are being
combed for Rockefeller support by
Sen. Thruston B. Morton, R-Ky., and
William E. Miller, the 1964 GOP vice
pre!.idential candidate.
In other poUtical developmenU :
-McCarthy said in Cleveland there
is a dangerous growth of military in·
fluence in American policies at home
and abroad.
The Minnesota senator said U.S.
military involvement in Vietnam
began with,.,~ «it group ~ aaid
"mucti .Vle ,same U}J.na • h~ been sbrted on the amaller scale in some
South American countries."
-Nixon said in Reno be expects
Kennedy to be hls opponent for the
presidency in November. ''My guess is
that if Kennedy rolls up the majorities
l tb1n.k he will in the primarie.s, he
will be nominated," Nixon said.
-Vice President Hubert H .
Humphrey says be "thinks" he will
become a DemOCNltic presidential
candidate. "I think so,·• he told an
Overseas Press Club A wards Dinner.
"I think everythina will fall out right."
Humphrey is expected to announce his
Hargitay Files Suit
Over Jayne's Estate
NEW ORI.EANS (UPI) -Mickey
~ Hartita.1, contending the late Jayne
MamfJeld wu capable of earning
'180,000 a year, filed a '1,489.566
federal suit Monday 1n behalf of ·the
actress" thrte childrdn and bsr Htete.
. M1lf Mantfttld, f.ormerl)' ?!larded to
~taJ, WU '1li.cs JllDe 29, 1187, wtaea ·a ar 'JI\· Wbic:h .., w11· rldit1&
a.lled·into ·tbe reer ot •truck an a .
dil:t, curving New Orleans blgbW1y.
decision Saturday.
-Kennedy called for help in "put-
ting this cowrtry together aealn" as
he, his wife, three of their children
and the family dog ''Freckles" made a
cam~gn swing througb southwest In-
diana.
-McC~y iJ the only name on the
Pennsylvania presidential primary
ballot today. Political prophets expect
much 'of its signifioence to lie in the
write-in votes for Humphrey, Ken-
nedy, Nixon aDd Rockefeller. * * * Pennsylvahia
Primary Voting
Termed Light
P I T TS B U R G H (UP I)
Penmyw....U.S voted in Ugtlt number!'
Wda.y f.n a dull primary in wtlfoh Sen.
Eugene J. McCarthy oi Mionesot.a was
the only presid«ltial oandidate on the
Democratic ballot.
Of cllief ~t to p o 1 it i c a 1
<ibservers w.as ttie size of the
McCarthy vote and the Write-in vote
for o~r presidential contenders.
The early vomng in Ptu.1adelpbia Wiils
reported li~t. ln Pitt:sbureh ~ w~s
"extremely light."
"There just isn't arry interest,"
Allegheny Coonty (Pittsburgh) Budget
DJ.rector Nl<ibolaa Stabile. t h e
Demoor.atic partys chief v o t e
estimator, said. He pre<lioted a 38 per-
cent turnout in the t'9UDty.
McCarthy's backer.9 were hoping M
would poll at least 200,000 votee. The
Minnesota sena~s w r i t e -l n op-
posttron was t.o come tmn Se!!. Robert r . Kennedy, who campaigned in the
natie, and Vice Presldmt HIJberl H.
Humphrey. Who is expected to an-
nounce his candidacy aoon.
On 1he Republican balk.t, the
atraogett wri~-in candidates were ex·
peoted ~ be prnldentW oandkWe ~Nixon and Gov. Nebon A.
Rockefeller of New Y001k, who has
~ he is open t.o a cir.alt.
Oil Sanday, Apd 28, Air California inaupntel Its new~
~between Ofangia Olwity and San Jca·&m Fnndlco. IA Califcnia
Methodists,
EUBNow
One Chnrch
DALLAS (UPll -'ho blabopa Jola-
ed bandl ~ lD ~ dranlltlc
ceremony UDlUDC Metbodilta an4
EvangeUcal United Brethren in the
lar191t church mercer 111 U.S. bbtiory.
''Lord Of the church, we IN unitecl
in thee, in thy chlU'cb, and now in tbe
United Methodist Cburch," said
Bbbopl Reuben Mueller and Uoyd c.
Wicte in a preyer before some 10,IXM)
pe.rtom, completinf the merger first
propoeed 185 year1 ago.
The new denomination na.mben
more tblD 11 ml1lloD persona In thla
country, .ptu about one million
OVel"MM.
EUB Bllhop Mu.tiler ~ Indianapolla
minutes before had read a dedlration
of uni.on followed by a stmu. state.
ment from Metbodlat Bishop Wicke of
New Yorlt.
Then they said: ''We now jointly
declare that the plan of uoion between
the churches hu, by lta term• and by
the terms of the enabling legltiation,
become effective and henceforth" the
two deoominationa shall "go fOrtb as a
single entity to be known as the United
Methodist Church.'' The two bishops
then joined hlmds over the formal pt.
of union.
The solemn ceremony also inclOOed
color -delegates from IOIDe 53 n&•
lions bearing flags of their countries.
A theoiogian ea11lier today said "this
is the day when the real work of the
United Metbodilt Church beings.
''Where once, scarcely a generation
ago, there were five churches. now
there is one," said Dr. Albert C.
OuUeT of Dallas, ..,eaking about "the
unfinished business of an unfinished
church.'.
"Where once our differences kept us
apart -with different languages and
folkways -now they are overcome or
else al least contained within a larger
circle of committed fellowship," said
Butler. a professor of theology at
Southern Methodist University.
The Methodist and EUB churches
had quite similar doctrines and
theological beliefs, and trace a com-
mon history. Three branches of
Methodism merged in 1939 and tae
evangelicals and the United Brethren
Churches joined in 1946.
"What has served till now as our
status quo ante will simply not suffice
for the upcoming future," Outler told
about 10,000 persons at Dallas'
memorial auditorium.
"The world is in fortous and agoniz-
ing turmoil ... " he said. "Tb• church
is in radical crisis ... in such times,
business as usual simply will not get
our business done. 11
He said the new chl.ircb muat be tru·
ly universal, evangeli~l and eager to
be "re.formed, renewed."
Federal Work
At UC Attacked
WASHINGTON (AP) -Nuclear
JJbyoa.ici.st John O. Rasmuuen of tbe
tJriiv•rsity of Oalifornie at Berkeley
says secret government researdt pro-
jects mutt be moved ell oampuaes to
bait "the erosion of 11nt-vms1ty sWi· dards." --,· .
At the Amerfcan Pb~ Society's
meeting Mooday. be, urged tihat
nudear and n01H100• projects be
moved ti> aepar• fiaCUitiea 1ucb u
t!llle U~ .nuclear W e e p O D I
laibonltory.
That laborab>ry, he said, is operated
by his tcbool for tibe Mxmlic Eaergy
c~ but 1.1 not oonnectec1 wtUi
the umveratry itself.
PW lillW ........... I.I''·"'· t.•
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•lltidl.1, Aprll 2J, lM UAILY PlUlf I ,_
78,000 Fleel., ••lated
U ~ N. Will Fight Phil.ippi~e Volcano Erupts
'Fire Wifb I
Fire'· MANILA ( UP I ) danler 10oe -a fJve·mlle activity wais r~m1nl.scent of north n o t the a 1 t and
Luzon's cone-ahaped Mount radlua an>und the mountain an atomic explosion. norttrwMt down the vobno
Mayon volcano erupted in a -laid fire bells lhot out of "We felt ubea falling all 11opes. Later in 1be dl7 tti.
aeries ot exploeiolllll early to-tbe oooe and wen followed over the place soon after,•• commksion extended the
PANMUNJOM, IC ore a
(UPI) -1be Umted Na-
tion1 ri1 ftctll "Fire wiCh
Fire" w b e n e v e r Qom.
mum.ta ICllC• provocative
attacks atooa Kore a• s
demiliUri.rieci iooe, a n
American AGn1ral 'Hr'Oed
Nor1tl Ko1u todey.
Rear Adm. Job1' v. Smith,
senior United NaUooe com·
mand delegate tlO the Joint
Armistice Com.missJoo, told
Maj. G«a. Pak O>ung Kuk
that U.S. and South KOl'ean
troops would take
"nece-J def en 1 iv e meesuna."
Smith end Pat coafm-ed m th.1:1 eruce vmace tiocSA1 tn
1tle 2l!8tl1 meeting ol the
Armistice Oommisalion.
The meeting ... Galled '->
dllcuu 11.t Smad'a Com-
munlllt attack OD American
patrok toath ol ~Qjom
in wbK:h ooe Aaerican
IOlclier WU killed and three
other wot.mded. Three North
Koreans were wounded.
lt YIW the • four4b Com·
mumt attack in t b e
demilttari:.ed ~ne 1 l n c e
Easter Sunday. During tbe
aeries ot encounters, ttaree
Americans and five ioutb
KorOMJ1 were killed and five
U.S. md three Soullh Koreea
aolcliers were wounded.
1be U.N. command iden-
tified the American killed
&JDdty M Pvt. Robert R.
Bilrbee, 218, whose faittler,
G«vge A. Bisbee, li~ Jn
Marblehead, Man.
by a thick muebroom of the reporter said danger IOoe to Include t!vt day. The shock of one blut black smoke. He said the Lava streama flowed more vlllaget.
The aubjeot ol the U.8. in· jolted tbe recordina pen off --------------------------
~Hlience lhip Pueblo e1me a r.earby eelnJlograph and
up at tM meetinc 1Sull there the Pbllipplne government
WM no propeu toward aipeeded evacuatlon of '10,000
~ot on Nleeee ol the £'..:.. • persons in the volcano sone.
vesael or i1a crew. The l1lrip '-AJmIDUDJ818 T h e earth-shaking U•
wu teUed off Woll580, . plosions hurled Mhel 30,IXM>
Nontl Korea, Jan. 23. G th • feet into tbe nJaht ak:les.
Smith tiold Pat ht ao 8 enng Two streams ol l a v a "unusual It.at~ ot tenMon ex· cascaded toward villages In
NIGHT •nd DAY SERVICE
9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 PM-SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
.llta" aloog the demlUtarUed the foothills of tbe 8,284-loot
zone beeauM ot "IDcreased In Buda llpjlt mountain on the B t c 0 l acta ol overt (Communilt) . r ·--Peninsula about 200 miles
agiuenton." sou theast of Manila. Smill aald U.N. f~s BUDAPEST, H u ll I a r y Eruptions cootinued .t lr·
t.ve betn "obJiged to fight (AP) -Oxftmqnjiat deJeca-regular intervals throu8b
fire wUb fire" ao long• the tiODI calbered in Budapltt the morning.
Oommuniltl viollite tbe 19M f()day to Ht lie atage for a There were no reports OD
-'~-. deatlb! or i"iur•~. ~ world eongreia. in MOIOOW "lJ ~ But Smith propoHd lbat It was Mayon'a wone .c-
* * * * * * Ransom Plan Denied
'...W ad together toward lats-this year tJmed at~ tMty in 21 yean and ita
Hducjog teoslon, tmNrd in-rooting "anti-tmperiallet ac· 32nd eruption sl.nce it firet
surlng implementation of tlon unity." rumbled inro life in 1814,
the ann!1ti.ce aigremnent The more indef)elldent killing 1,200 pen.>ns and
and toward p r e 1 e r v i n g Communist .,.,..,..es _ those sending volcanic d u s t
peace in Korea.'' ,_ w around the world for two
t of Romania, Yugoslavia, P a k r e f u a e d o years.
acknowledge Smith's pro-North Vietnam, Nor th A spokesman for the
In Pueblo Release poeia:J. He said IMt Sunday's Korea and Japan -wre P h 11 i ppine Voloanology
ioddent was ~used by expected to stay away, but Commission predicted the
American toklien wbo "in· activity of the volcano would vaded our me." an East European aource ac~erate. He said, "the
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Three months after the cap-
ture of the USS Pueblo by
North Korea., the only effort
being made to he the
vessel and its 8Z·man crew
la through the continuing
.er!• ol tal.kl at Pan·
munjom.
Sta~ department officials
conceded today tbat all ef·
forts made through third
parties (which they did not
ktentify) bad failed. The
Pyongyang government haa
made it pl:aln ttiat ttle
Korean war truce vil.Ulge ls
the only place where it will
discUM the Jan. 23 seizure
o1. the lichtly armed in·
telligen~ vessel, the of·
tlciala said.
One crew member was In·
j~ fat.ally and 1everal
reported wounded w h e n
three Norotb Kenan patrol
boat., supported by MIG jet
tighten flYinl overhead,
overwhelmed the Pueblo
and forced it Into Woman
Harbor.
Tbe North KorUJlll charg-
ed the wssel had violated
their 12 -m i le territ«ial
limit, but the Umtied States
baa 1t.elldfartly matntaioed
thllt the Pueblo wa1 In in·
ternatiioml 1Mters ~ 15
miles off the K<>ftlll cOllllt
when k Wll hijacked.
0. Chandler
Re-elected
To AP Board
NEW YORK (AP) -The
memben ol 'Ibe Auodated
Preu have re~leded two
directort and elected five
new one..
The eiec&n Monday •
the a n n u a 1 D*Dbersb.ip
meetinc ol the worldwide
cooperative newsg.atberlng
organiDtion WM to ft11 the
Mah ot six dired«a "1)ose
terms on tbe ti-member
board bad erplrtd aod to fill
a vacancy caued by death.
00. Chaa~r ol the Lot
Aogelel Times, wbo WN re-
elected wMh a V'CM ol t ,144,
led the belkthlg. Second In
the baDotinc WU Jamet S.
Cop)e, of 4be San DietO
Union, wbo •• N •call
with a V.-ol t,D.
A.lao In tbe ltDer al
categcry vdtnl. Ridlatd c.
Steele, ot the WOfteller,
M .... , Tetecran and Sun·
daoy Telegram. WU elected
with 7. 4.'t1 wtill; Tbanw
Vall. ol tlte Clen1md Plain
Dealer, 7,11& 90tel; aad J.
Kelly Silk. d ctie Greea91DI, s.c., Piedmtat. 5,85'.
J. M. McC\eBand Jr., ol
the Longvielr, Wub., 1>ail1
Ne1r1, wa1 e~ director
foe a city of 1"1 tum I0,000
popuiadoll. B • rec:elftd
7,157 vote. to t.• lat
Jamel s. ti.,. ol .... w ........ h., OllMr ....
Reporier.
A state d e p a r t m e n t "~ ttie K o r e a n said they are keeping an tempo increases u the daY9
armistice will be mai.ntmoed open mind abol& particlpa· go on."
spokesman deni41d that the or new ww bJW out tion in the M o s c o w A loud exti'k>sion preceded
United States bad pl.am to depeMI entirely on the at· congrea. The Chine9e and ttle first eruption about 20
pay a ransom for the ship titude of yow Ede," Pak Albanian parties en certain minutes alter midnight to.
and crew -such aa was\ said. Dtlt to attend either meeeing. day. A reporter lnaide tbe guggested by Democratic~~------------------------------------~--------------------------------------------------------------liiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii-..
presidential c a n d i d a t e
Eugene J. McCarthy -
because it W'OUld be tan-
tamount to admitting the
United Stat.et v i o 1 a te d
Kanan waters.
Immediately after the
IE'Jlzure, the Unit.id Statea
asked tbe Soviet Union to
persuade Pyongyang to
reluse the ship and crew.
Although the R u I s i a n I
claimed publicly that it was
abictly a maUer between
Washington and Pyongyang,
diplomatic sources 1 a i d
some fruitless efforts were
made by Moscow.
The Unit.ed States also
took the ?Mtter to the
United Nations S e c u r i t y
Council Jan. 26-11, but North
Koru, not a member ol the
United Natioos, refUMd to
negotiate tbroutb the world
org.anization.
ML-earthy, ID propoa1nc a
r.ansom, Nid receutly 1bat
the Kemedy administration
paid • nntl(lOl to CUba in
the form of a shipment ol
farm machinery to lain
releate of pritoaers cap-
Big. Thia year even bigger. Some Chevrolet Trf.Levela
are longer. Some wider. Some with more cargo room.
Size up Impala. Nothing In Its field comes u big. For
lnatance, In many others you wouldn't dare try laying
a 4 x 8-foot mirror flat In the main cargo level. (Espe.
clally If you're 1uperatltlou1.) In Impala, no problem.
The hidden 1torag1 compartment on the lower level
also taket more of your gear than any of them. The
roof rack you order should take care of the rest. For
your comfort, there'• extra hip and shoulder room.
W• make our Trl-Level1 lotl more attractlw Jn other
waya, too. With 1uch excluslvet In Chevrolet'• fleld
ce Department
TAY ONE FOR llZE AT YOUR DEALER'S.
as an Ignition warning system. You'll get a buzz out of
It If you ever leave your key In the switch. There are
rocker panels that clean themselves with every
shower you go through. Inner fenders that protect the
outer ones from rust. And hidden windshield wlpera
on many models. Even with all these advantages, I~
pala and Chevelle Concoura are the lowest priced
luxury wagons In their fields. And If that's what you
like to hear, hear this. Unprecedented savings are
yours now at your Chevrolet ...
dealer's '68 Savings Explo. See -
the details below.
. and in tbe Bay of Pip in-vu.loo.
t
But 1tate clepertment of.
flctals llid that WU dlf·
hnlllt. that the priloDeTs
had been captured in 811 ef-
fort to create a Cubm in-
1urredion. The Pueblo and
tta crew, they say, are the
victirm ol piracy oo the high
telS.
U.S. Blasts
Harassment
By Soviets
MOSCOW (AP ) -Angry
but trying to r e m a i n
diplomatically cool, the U.S.
Embuty in Moscow has
finally protested out loud
agam.t what it con.skiers in·
cne11ng Soviet haras&meot.
1be pubtic complaint is
eomethlDI ... ' tndk:Ming • loll ol ptltlence with aome
ol ~. trocmlet t b a t
Americans encouD'&er in the
Soviet UaiOll. About tile only
W'f the embelly cu try to
ltrike beck ii with com·
plainlll flo the Soviet govem-
ment aad then wttb publld·
ty.
The iftddmt involved U.S.
m.iUtarJ attaches, on whom
Soviet preaure u mo.t
dceable.
Bat in addition to the
pne1an on military at·
t.dMil, American civilian
----have felt mon ......... 1baa UIQal lately,
~l*tMJ are ?>mg lolioftd. mote often. And --u . 8 .~ Ambueador Uftd;JD I:. Tb Om p s O D
M:anacl bJ U.S. Air Force
--._ coan1tldool Ill Wat1t t I NC'tatly, SoYiet
t=drh Mrr9d emhwJ ,, ,.. from eaMocnary -.... .._.'Ibey ., ..... ..,. tmbMJ i{a: 'DIMapiw WU W%.. so•l•t
..... £ ....... elm~
U.S. -4 -.. Wettern ~ -.dw wltb
" • ...,... ........ Int
betw .. a.pl lldlDc of tn-
formllb ..S dttlll:c: tbM .. ~ ....... ,. . .
-·--
•
'68
IMPALA STATION WAGON.
It'' nu no oih• IOVlng1 ·~nt your ....... s.vt~ ,._ 1 A,,., Ch.v· '°"'" s.vll!I• "°" I At'f>( reg· lno when you buy Orrf ChevroW •
Chevrolet dtol• hoi ev.r htld. To rolet Of C with ~ TVtbo-ulor Chevrolet with 25'0-h Turbo· Chev.ti• with V8 engine.
""'' It tn9<llll utro buying pow•r-fire vs qlne, ,0W9r11llde ond Ar• V8, Turbo Hydro·Motle and '°""' S.Vlttr Plott 5 lvv ...,
'·· ti hit U Ch•vrolet or CMvell• V8 two-• on exploi•on of tovlng1 on Chtvro-whit9WO L w ewo s.
'-ond (hev8* Tok• o ~ at hftVt ~ ''-1 Any Chev· hnut Sevlf!I! '90ft 4 Now, for fovr·door hardtop tnodehtow •
"'--bonus so~• plona. Then ... rol .. or t\rile with 2.so-hp Turbo· the flfd time ewr, big toVings on viny1 top, .i.ctrk dod, whMI ~ ~ Chevr~ deolet. Fire VS, 'owerafWe and wh1tewone. pow. dlK btok .. ond power ..._. ond oPC*lfQn<e guard lt91M.
Hap29"ing now ot your Chevrolet dealer's, a tremendoua explosion of extra buying power. Only the leader could make it hoPP9ft:
•
--·--·-·-----------
..
. Pellee on Alert Wellare
Crisis
Looming
~---~------~~::=..;~AW ..._,_.Reetne Clil~
1,500 Protesting
At Draft Center
Sales Tax C:ut Suggested
SACllAMENl'O (AP -ctnctcr, c" Ip a r Wein· ly t. nae CbalrlMn o1 ..,. .... beraw. 1m1•• 11t11t .... Ill 11ie JM& ~--Mii. u
Fl.auce CommbMe ra1*I ecG1110m1 la tbe ...,,.. to bar._. swolMa bf au.
the poMtbilitJ tDdeJ ol tbe ...,. .. ~ ti lnaJl. pected d • f 1 e It a • Ill
ptrmlttlnc ibe state ...., cine a i.. badget tNt F e b naary, admbdltratlon
tu to dr -half t ._ w., orillullY Mt at ·~.7 saJd It had diJCOm'ed tbtt OAKLAND (UPl) -Fit·
tee"D hundred a n t l w a r
demonstrators marched In
ftont ot the Oakland lndU<:·
tioe ()enter today. •boutint
"atell no. nobody goes'' and
carrying balloons w l t b
tlogans of ''end rac.Um."
S e vera l hundred
poli~men mobilized in a
parking garage across the
strftL An orricer with a
bullhorn ordered the pkketl
to stay on the aidewalk.
A confrontation between
the demonstratora, many of
them carryin& w o o d e n
1bieJdl, and Army Inductee•
._ avoided whee left!\
buloedl arrived ID boor
abeed ot IClhedule at the ....-.r. The bulll wen ec· ~by six police ca.. ~ oftlcera arm·
ed ,,.., lbotlUDI·
Only about 1 00
demoutntora _... on tt>e
scene for the inducteea' ar·
tjval. Tbey chanted "doo't
CO" but mllde DO attempt to
prevent .. youtba from
•otcbll the buillbl· ~· "' the protest plla>ed a three-bour rally,
callaC lt an effort to
''.JJrtdet the flP bttw811l the
aaUwar mowmeat and 1be
black li b • r a t I o D move-
llMllt... P'rom ... ea.-.
tlMJ .... to Jmlrds tlD Cbe
Alameda County Courthouse
to demand the reltue of
Huey Nmon, a Black
Pllliher leader awaitinC
trial OD a Jn\ll"dG' dlarie in
tbe ahootmC of .., OUland
poli~an.
The rally al90 WM billed
as part of a "1top the draft
week" tct be ellmaxed by
peace J*ades in the na·
Uon' 1 JMjor' cities Saturday.
I.a the crowd muahroom·
ed in front ol the center' the
aponlOl'I drove • ftMbed truck wttla IOUDd equipment
to ... fraat of .. builctinc
............ exhorted
the cliemOllltrMDr• 1ritb .....
bar .....
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
State ofttcials 1 o u I h t
despttately today to obtain
postponemeDt of a far·
reaching federal c o u r t
decision that coWd cause
administrative havoc in the
welfare system.
T h e R e a g a n a d·
ministration asked I t 1
lawyer. Atty. Gen . '11lomas
C. Lynch. to seek immediate
staying of Last P"riday's
federal ruling in San Fran·
ciaco. The decislon ruled in·
valid the 41-year.old re·
qulrement that state welfare can be obta1ned only after a ~~-~---r.:~:::.::;;;.;-.--.-.;.;;.;;;;.,;;;;;;:J
ruideoce ol one to five "I'm tryiJlS to .ue an impNllion on the Joaac
yean. JadJ Mn llae't JOU bow an.'Vthm Ulat cto.a't
Speocer Wtlllaml. state · llUMk my ._. poap?I'
bea1tft IDd 1Nlfare dlrtdor,
said Monday that tbt atate -------------------would aak that enforcement
ot the federal rullng be put
off until Ute outcome of a
similar case rn>w pending
before the U.S. Supreme tourt.
Potato Men
Strike, Put
Chips Down
No Increase Imminent
In State College Fees
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Regents, however, have
Gov. Regan'• .tmmWration the powe'I' to .t fees or im·
plana no immedtat. drive to pose tuitiOll.
op "' a cen "' blWon, but pow ia bit by the terma of a new tchool
bent& low·illcOme Oalllor· unnpeeted upenses. bill required tbcl state to 119y
n.lant. Be told 1 reporter "there local lchool districts more
A. hit commiCtet bepa will be tome tort ot ddldt than expected, resultiq in a
aa QDUIQl.l bearinl ea tilt plctutt at the end of tbtl '182 million deficit bJ the
statt'a 1anlJed ftlcal pie· Jflflr, can'Jhtl onr to next end of the ueMf ft1ca1 e-yur" un1eu tbe ltgi.dlture year, June •• 199.
ture, ~· Gecqe P. M1Ber asre-to kollomiea. But a moatb later, Unruh
Jr. CD-Marina.) said; Wt I 11 be r 1 • r a n d produced new f1iurea and
"I am ~ to dilcover Lelialliti.e Analyst A. Alan charged ~t t b e ad-.~..... 't · •1't _ _. .. _ Pott, the lawmakers' filcaJ miJ:lbtration overestimated
UllJ ..... r J im... .,_ u. ltdvlter", w•re 11DDmoded to the deficit by $tO mlllloo.
po111b1e immediately t o teltify before the Finan~· u iu ·d .. I remedy Che t a x p a 1 e r s • "' m.iuer sai want to plight by pennlUiq the Committee oo what has ha~ know whether the 191U9
salea tax. wbidl bits our peded to tbe budget 1lnce it budget the governor sub-wa pr__. ln January for mitted as a .... , ..... ed ...... ,. t lower income g r o u p 1 vrv-v ucuoun. .,~e
harder, to go doilrD by a half ·~hi;;;;ifJtcali;;;iii;;;yea:r;;;;;;bellanln;;;;;;;;iiii;';;J;;;;;u;;;· ;;;;;;is;;trul~y;;;;;balan;;;;;;;;;ced;;.;;";;;::;~
cent." " The Mlet la wat railed
from four to flYe Clll9 lut
yec, wttb bait ol tbe hike
aet ulde te pay for local
PJ'01*'ty -rtdoctiaDI thla year. But anleu t h e
legtalature can agree OD a
formula for allocating the
tax relief by July l, a half
cent ol tile sales tax In·
crease will lapee. and the
levy will go down to four
a.od a half cellt'J.
PROPELLERS ...
SHAFTING ~-
S11UTS & SHAfDN6 FOR All TYPf BOATS
I & J BEARINGS •nd PROPELLERS
Strai9htening-Repitchin9-Balencin9
67J-7t00
JOHN KllPU
Marine P1opeller Service
411 JM ST .. MIWPOIT •CH
Previomly, A11 em b I y
Spniker Jeue M. Unruh (D·
IJll}ewood), UC> bed SUI·
gested lettiq the tu bike dr~. 1~;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;;~~ But Gov. Reagn'• finance Ii
Wife Believes Leader
Of Minutemen Slain
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -
The crunch has come for the
potato drip industry in
Northern California.
Production c r u m b I e d
Monday in five p'8n~ ea 325
driver-salesmen 1 t r u c le
agaiMt Granny Gooee In 0'*1804 end Stockton,
Laura Scudder at Tracy,
Frito-Lay at San Jose and
Bell BNOd et Baywerd.
raiM feet at CalHania ttate Alec L. Cory ot San Dies<>,
coUetea followtnC t b • chairman ol the truatees'
UftivertitJ of CaUfornja finance ~. 1 1 i d
state reg«ltl' aotloa to in-Monday there were no
creue student cUrge$. formal proposals on fees '!!win Still
Critical "At this point we haven't before the board. Trustees
gotten any fUrtber with our will meet Wednesday and
thinking on fffl." ~JC C. Thursday at Chico State
Sht"rilfs, Reagan's 1pecial College. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
assistant for education , said One of the Siamete twins
Mond_,. seperated svlically a week!
Guna_u
AMPU•llU
SELL
OUT!
SAN DIEGO (AP) -'ftM
wilt ol Troy Bouataon, held
or eautomta'• Mtnaelemtn,
saya be bu been miuing
for ne•ly a ::ve• Mid lhe
bdevN the only "loSical
exp)Madon 61 that be bal
been kil)ed."
HoagbtAle. M. le8der ol
the MCret, armed Ql'&lllba-
Uon, WM tr... on bail when
she 1ut 1-'d from htm May 20, 198'7.
He wu ..,...unc a JM1.
17, 1911 eocvidicle and t~ priMa ...teoce
for a ftrtll'IM Mt :' r' M 1
Legillature
At Work
wbt8 be telephoned her
ho lndepeodence. Mo.,
abt Mid Monday.
.ird rathtt not go into
1'ho might have done it
because there ce ao many
pcwibilitiet,'' Mrs. ~e
Hou&!*Jn aald.
Sbe uid ~ friends
have inveati&ated b e r
blllbmd'I d i I appeal'~.
'lb9r located the c.-be was
drMlc iD 0. Mictwelt ''but
l aa't H1 ~ more
More tt*1 a>O production
workera refused to ~
pietet Unes 8fet up by the
strlken, who ere members
ol Temmters U!Won locails.
1be driver-salesmen walk·
ed out Monday after re·
jectlng a mmag~meot offer
which bad been recom·
mended by a Teamster netOtiatinl cmnmttM. 1bey wut a OM a peretat com-
millioo Oft .....
Former State. 11'\nance S riliz• • ago todl'y. cominued in
DlN!ct« Gorden P. Smith te 8ti0ll critical concltion but her
said early ttlll Jtar U.at if liltier WM "doln( Vf!r'J
UC re~ toot action to well." eccordlng to doctors
approve new fees, "we wlll Surgery at the county-USC Medical
propose a bill for the st.ate Center.
colleges. This bae to be done Wi.thJ•n Law Dr. Frederick Leix, chief together." ____ of pediatric aurgtty,
Since then 1 s p e c l a l Dr. Richard Koons, assis· .....,.., ~ • ~ "'-•• f'teell ..... 14"11 ,_
regents ' commi-Uee sharply REDDTNG tAP) -A -WAdor of Ole depart· ~ Pkli.,. s n n s 1t I scaled down ita ori.rmal fee Shasta Co nty s · merit of aneatbesia, said H..._ ~ .. _......... · .. • ·" • • • .. • ·
9
.. . u up er 1 or .... , -~• sitt.91 .•••••••.••• s ff.ti
tncraH propoaal frOtn $156 court judge has ruled llat Moodly, Cbarroa'a critical J ...._.,. Wlftl c ... a c..11
to 181, the amount approved the county hoaJ»tal must condition stemmed from 0..-S4tS.Ot ............ SHI.It
fnday. And Reitan bu perform a sterllizatloo blood 109S during the day· C........_ 1491.00 ............ SJtl.M
mtde lt clear be conalders _,,ation :-A.I~ Jone operation to 1eparate T~ •. ~" •1111 c-• ,,.., $Ut.M .. • • • • • •• • • .s 7'.tl
the UC fee Increase "a -~: .-a.. to'r: ~.Y UJUl•"'u~ her frOID ber ...i~-r..-~ ···.r .. ,JV~... , v"" ..-.-'-AJUll ~ A..., sm.91 ............ $149.tl
small *P" toward t'991!tual Judge Richard W. Abbe elf a. ~· ::;:"
MAJOR llANDS
UP TO 50% OFF
f ROM APRIL 24 TO MAY 5, 1961 ONLY
.... NOW
s H.ts ............ s "·'' s 14.tl ............ s 24.tl snt.H ............ s 7t.tl
SJSt.tl •••••••••••• $1tf.tl ....... tuition. ruled MondllJ ..i it ii com· The Sirls, born Feb. 18 to , Y• •• ..._ Blac~ Panther• Sberlffs. a former UC 'flee pletely ,,.. h law for a 11-,ear-oJd unwed rtrl. ....... A.,.. ebanctDor, nid on)J tllat such operatton.s aa a meens were JOined at the liver. The ' "'· • .......,
A k I j . "we will have to Ste how the or blrttl control. doctor& Nid Charron Wal AU IMtrvmentl fully Gu1r1ntM4
S414.tl .••••••••••. tm.91
s n unction trustee• feel about it." 111e county supeTV\sors roore seriously a, f e ct e d I 5 LAND GUITAR
Tbe trustees for the 1!).. recently ordel'fld a halt to because the aur1ery rt~
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-campus college system ha ve suob surgery because ques· quired them to sever mort
The militant Black Panther the power to recommend tions were N iled on their blood vessels in her than in 304 Merine Ave., a.lllM tslMMI ~~~~W~~~~~~~~g ~ey ~~~·~~~u~·~====~~~~~·~~~n~7~~~~·~P~h~~~~~~6~7~~~~™~~~~ court for an injuction pro-fees. This is up to the JeT"e Hurley filed suit f()f a -.
blblting 0 a k I and and Jegi.slatm'e md the governor. client askine they be allow·
Alameda County fr om governor. ed ...-.
ha:ra&liJl« k and all ~k -------------------------------~!
penom.
Jod.C• William T. Sweigert
eet May 2 Monday for a
bearlne. four days befOH
the ICbeduMd ~ of the
trial kl OM1and of Panther
leader Huey P. Nntoo, ac·
CUled of murdtriDC an
Oakland pollcem111 1att Oct.
21. The PaaCIMr &Wt in
federal court ello aau 1bat
Newton's trial bt Mlted .
9CCBS ..r SPGa IM1ll ....
AT WMlll & Ill ,..., ..... == ............ .......... _.,,........,,
I Ulllfll 11111"*"' :t::r.-• .... wMt•tra••:-............ ... .. ................. ""-....... = t1ww ................ T..,, .. ........, ... ,.. .............. ... ................................... ..... , .. ..., ... ,. a., .... ...., ............................. ..,
.................... 11111111'1111 ,..
tudu al• ti..., w.,...,, ... --.
C1kd .... 6LM•W1U1lllw .... ....., ....... .., ...
-...aa. ... u.-.11a...~ Lt•• .............. -. ... v.... a....,:
,. .............. , ... llt
fn411Mlll (al)--· --.. I Ill
1 ....... •nr Ml .. , ,. 1 •n 111
0,.1,__,a Mc~
... lo ... ~
,.. ........... 11 ....
..... ltMTHOVT
CHMCll .....
..... """ MleftOt "' .............
....... J'OUf'
~ICt:OUM
.....,_ ,., .. Mfow
.. "",., $1 w ...._. .... a....~~
,.,,.. .. aJe 11, ....,.. ... ..,_!( . . ,_. .. ,... ,..,.....,
Southern
CALIFORNIA FIRST
National Bank
Ill ----COUNTY UWw C. ne ,.._..._..._ ..... ~ ...................... .-... .,_. • mn ._. 9'I&. ....,_....,......, ................ ........,,,..._.. ...... .............. ,. ...... ,... ............ ...., ,_.IC..,._,,_.,.,....._.., ....... .,..._
Be sure you get the whiskey you Clft
be aft of •
With che taste that's so pleasing
more people huy it than 11iy other brand.
Saaram•s 7 Crown.
Mike lt your number .
You'll be pleased you did.
Seaamn·s 7 Ctown.
The Sure One.
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For TM Record
DEATB NOTICES
' I
'IALTZ MOJlTVAJtlES C....41e1Mar OB,.. C......... MIMClf
UU. BBOAbWAY MOllTUAJtY ~~~ ...
PACIFIC VIEW MEllORIAL PAU
~Meniar7
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PEE"& l'illlLY
COLONIAL PUNDAJ,
110ME ,......_ATt . .......... --
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WD'IQD7 iifalnJUY ....... ~ ... ··-.
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Korea Talk
Set at UCl
South Korean COlWul S. G.
Park will speak on "South
Korea Since the Pueblo
Inolderlt" T b u r s d a y II.·
ternooo at UCI-.
The talk. ooe In an ln·
ternedonel .nm aeriel
sponJOred b)' campus Y ouni
Republioms, will be at 2
p.m. in the third floor
k>uatJe, Commons B\.81ding.
Admiuion wiil COit 25
cents.
DEA'l'B NOTICES
..
I -• rr' --
Head Start
Pro~
Await OK
SANT A. ANA -Orqe
QMmty eommwav Actlan
COuncll. Inc.. ii curreatlJ
awaiting approval from tbe
office ol Ecooom.lc Op-
portunlty for 14 Head Start
proarams.
The progralDI .. dellp.
ed to serve IOO cti1dral wbo
will be eorolllog In ldn-
deriarten in the fall and will
tan place in 1n •igtrt-net
session during the aummer.
Community Me t b ociist
Church in Huotlngton BNCh
has applied to conduct one
of the programs.
Persons in~sted in~
sib'9 job oped:ngs in v arioua
capacities for the programs
tbould me applications with
ttie Stiete Depctment of
Employment ottlce, 2823 S.
Bristol. Senta Ana.
Preference will be given
to persons reskling in the
area and those with ch1Jdnn
elU'olled tn the program.
5 on Coast
S~k Bank
Awards
Federal Reusing
Kuchel Slates 'Self Help '
ru-antee bonds ls.ued by the c o n s t r u c t l o a er
any pUbUc er private ooo· rebabllltaticlll of Jow-income
protit corporation to ftnance bousinf.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
. • •
l' our /tlon9'1 Worth
Overworked Computers Not
Likely to Check Your Tax
By SYLVIA PORTER
Q. Now that you've filed
your 1967 Federal lncome
tax return. what are the
chances that the Internal
Revenue Se rv ic e's
mechanical brains will pick
up even your sUghtest er·
ror'?
A. Not as great as you
have been Led to th.ink.
In the past couple of
weeks, a flurry of scare
stories ha~ appeared in
newspapers and magazines
reporting that the IRS's
computers are relentlessly
whirling 2-4 hours a day,
seven days a week and giv·
Ing the impression that the
computers will s e 1 e c t
millions of our just·fUed
returns for questioning -
among them, of course.
yours. The impllcation is
that tons of returns are
being &4ltomatically fed into
the giant system and that
never before has an audit of
your return been so likely.
Well. This being t h e
season for stories such as
this, I've done my own in-
vestigating. And the fact~
are quit~ different from
whit these 1torie1 seem to
suggest.
ITEM: Despite the we of
advln«d data processing
equipment. the IRS i s
"almost sinking in an ocean
of paperwork." says tbe
Research I n s t I t u t e of
America in a report private·
ly circulated to i t a
subscribers. ~ Research
Institute adds:
"The computer system
Itself is lo trouble. Because
the demand tor computer
113age far exceeds t h e
present IRS c o m p u t e r
capability. I n d i v I d u a I
returns with underpayments
and overpayments ot tax get
processing priority. So-call·
ed "full • paid" indiv idual
returns received by the IRS
Ln 1967 may not get properly
entered in the IRS computer
aetup until 1969."
ITEM: The heart of the
problem is t h a t an
o v erwhelming 105.000.000
returns were received and
49,000,000 refunds w er e
made last year -a volume
of paper the IRS d.idll 't an·
ticlpate u n t i 1 uno. This
reflects the spectacular ex·
pansion of bus~s and the
upgrading of millions of
workers to taxp&ying levels.
ITEM: On top of th ts. the
I RS has been receiving lens
of millions of information
returns on dividends and in-
terest-and also a soanng
number of complex in·
dividuaJ returns.
ITEM: Then on top or au
th.ls in turn, I.be IRS com·
puters have been uncovering
man errors than ever
before ill!d thus its employes
have been doing more cor-
responding with taxpayers
than ever before.
This hardly adds up to the
publicized picture of an ef·
ficleot mechanical brain
quickly ferreting out your
Debbie Yurner
loves
Lester,
Ryons!
Mlt• Tumer Iowa
the peraonal attentiOft
1he rKelvet at LAeter,
Ryon• & Co .... "°
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bit. Letter, RyOftt &
Co. It larte enouth
to kHp pace wfth
th• pulH of th• flnanelal world, yet"'"" anoa9h
to be pereonal. At lHtar, Ayone & Co. tfla etlant'• lntarfft It
tlwayt mo1t Important. and to aid aaelt ellant't Intl....._
lHtar, Ayon1 offer• one of the Southltnd'1 molt comple ..
AttHreh Department• plut • eonetant euppfy of clet8Hecl
report• covering the current mtricet.
Whether your lnvtttmanta are moderate or large, you wltl
find lttter, Ayon• l Co. 1 dependable place to do buelna ...
LESTER. RvoNe & Co.
ltrf1•1 lntlltrl $111111911
MlMHllS NlW VOllll STOCll EllCH•l'GC
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Now open and serving
COSTA MESA/ NEWPORT BE.A.CH
111'1111
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For you ••• courtesy end a•n•fne frfendllneu.
For your •winp ••• hlth .. eamtnp In IMUf'H ufety.
Bi% =r.~ B% :s;=
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''WIERE COURTESY IS A WAY OF BUSllESS LIFE"
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OVER THE COUNTER
Special services.
Four leading service companies
with excellent potential.
Americ.nt •• ••nine more money Ind n.-.. ~
time to sPfnd It. Who wlll profit? E. F. Hutton says the
booml111 ~ lndustty hi& much to pin.
And In 1 new ....._. An4 lu9IMM lutWy ,,.
~lect fout _,.. frldustty stocks • especially likt .
They ,.,,.. Jn price frcm $19 to $63 1 shaft,
wrth estimtttd P/E r.Uos from 9.5 to 25.7. We offer
them far 'f'IAK contidar.tlon. If you'd llkt 1 copy of
this sur•Y· tlrnt>fy mall tht coupon.
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l. f'. HURON I COMPANY INC.
MeMlllll ,,..,, 'MIC Me ,Att~ COAIT ITOC:lt lllCMANOCI
AMO OflfC .......... llCUllm ANO COMMOOITV UCHA•D
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I M ~ n<Wl'#AY. L°"6 MACH CP.,.,, L-------------------~J
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Tuesday's Oosing New
--------·---------
Tuf1d.Q, Aprll 23, 1%8 DAIL V PILOT 9
List
...
J fl DAl'l V PILOT
Angels Seek New Experience 2 Straight~:
ROGER IN REPOSE -Roger Repoz,bad a b\U.ight for the.Angels
Mo)lday. He's shown here crossing home plate ~nset) after hitting a
home run. He's greeted by Jimmy Hall. In big photo, he scored from
South Africa Sellout
Suitable Awards Listed
ror IOCDayof Infamy
To the Tnternational Olympic Com·
mittee's nine-man board: The Neville
Chamberlain medal for appeasement
above and beyond the call of duty.
To the once-sterling creed of the
Olympic Games: a bott of black crepe
to symbolize its death. To the Mack African and Communist
nations that foreild the IOC into ap·
peasement: an Oscar for acting out
one of the great bluffs in sports world
history. To the Union of South Africa for suf·
fering supreme ridicule: Take comfort
in knowing that the hassle ov~r y~r
being invited to the 1968 Olympics will
likely result in the replacement
of aged Avery Brundage u head of
the IOC.
Thus we pass out suita~e awards
............•...... .,..
WHITE
WASH
···················-
f<i~ infamous act that took place in
SflW'land over the weekend : the
gtOll 'sellout of the Union of South Ab:lea by the 10c. ~g to pressure brought to
btar "by host Mexico, black Africa and
the CQinmunist bloc, the Brundage-led tio:i?
1
cted Uke a buneh of women by
ch g their minds and reversing
aa earlier decision to lnvite South AC·
riCI to the '68 s-pectacle.
~~ugh the South Africans agreed
to jntegrate tbelr Olympic squad, thus
i;atfd.jing IOC requlremeot4. the na-
tion's apartheid policies remained
undwlged an&.that's what triggered
th& protest in 45.aclc Africa. "lf South Africa goes to Mexico, we
wjU stay home." the b'8ck Afrlcans
re,,utd in unison. ·
J!arnering a few political points,
Russia and her satellites suggested
they too would boycott the October
colossus if the verdict to include South
Africa were not reversed.
Weak-kneed Mexicans immediately
grabbed their ~ and rushed to
the rescue of their '86 million in·
vestment by heading the pressure
campaign to have the IOC reconsider
its decision.
Add Nausea
And when the IOC cap1tulate"a.
Mexican OlympJc offklals balled
themselves as champions of human
rights.
Add nausea.
A'sk any Oriental Uvinf ln Mexico
what be thinks of Ulat country's 10·
called "Uberal acceptance of mlnorl·
ty groups."
Supposedly Soatb Africa was tbt.
1acriflclal ioat C. prese"e Olympic
unity a.nd to not add Impetus to world
racial unre1', lDC1ucll11f a proposed
boycott of tbe Ualled States team try
American Neine1.
Reu S.eriflee
But the real sacrifice was a sup-
posedly iroll-018d code of Olynipic
ethics that WM reputedly ~void of
political and racial influence.
And future Olympic Games may
well sufier from this sellout, which is
perhaps tantamount to Chamberlain's
·'gift'' of Czechoslov&Jr:ia to Adolph
Hitler to maintain world peace three
decades ago.
What is to stop the Communist coun-
tries from using this prec\dent of
threatened boycott to pin "'further
goels in future Olympjcs?
You would think that by now we'd
have learned that appeasement serves
only to breed more r J d 1 c u 1 o u a
demands by thote appeased.
DAILY '1LOT ~ n aldlln ic.....
first base on a single by Hall. Rick Reichardt gestures for him not
to slide but Repoz plays it safe. Angels won, 4-2, and play Washing-
ton again tonight. ·
Lonborg Says
He'll Pitch;
Heitz Injured
BOSTON -Jim Lonborg, lhe
Boston Red Sox' right-handed ace who
injured his left knee in a skiing ac-
cic:hlnt last December, predicted Mon·
day that he'll be able to pitch in relief
within two weeks.
Lonborg. who posted two World
Series victories after winning 22
games during the ~gular season 1n
1967, made llbe prediction after pit.
ching batting practice for the first
time at Fenway Park.
I ./ I
ST . PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS
Parker MacDonald banged bome a re·
bound 1bot at 3:41 of the overtime to
itve the Minnesota North Start a 3-2
vtctory over St. Louis Monday night
and tie their National Hockey League
West Division final playoff semi at
one game eaeb.
' ' " LOS ANGELES -Ke nn y
Heitz, forward-guard on UCLA's na-
tional championship basketball team
this year. was in tile UCLA Medical
Center Monday following surgery for a
shoulder separation.
Heitz, 20. Santa Maria. was injured
Saturday in a pickup basketball game
at El Camino College.
I ./ I
LOS ANGELES -Ralph Botton,
who Uve1 la K.noxvtl.le, Tenn., was
voted Southern CaUfornta'1 f l e 1 d
aUalele of the week Monday by the
Soatl9era California Track Writers. ne llM Olympic silver medaUst '*'" the loag jump with a leap of %&
feet I l.chea and then came back to
cop Ute triple jump al 5&-834 at thl'
Dopood Relays.
I I I
OAKLAND-Jerry Quarry is the
early favorite to defeat Jimmy Elli.~
Saturday aod win the World Bo~ing
Anodation heavyweight title.
Quarry was a 13-10 favorite Monday
In Laa Vegas. Nev.
NAT KILLER -Angel pitch-
er Jack Hamilton tells report·
en how he beat Washington
Monday night at Anaheim Sta-
dium. He gave up only three
bits in 4-2 win. .
MOTSCHENBACHER
SETS RACE MARK
RIVERSIDE (UPI) -L o t h a r
Motscbenbacber, a 3 0 ·ye a r • o Id
German driving a Ford-powered
McLaru. Monday be~ Riverside
International Raceway's one· lap
record for U.S. road recing cham-
pionship cars.
His time on the 2.8-mile, nioe·turn
courH was 1:21.0 or 115.555 miles per
hoQ.r. Motsebenbacber's clocking was not
a record since be was ooJy practicing
for Sunday'• 150-mile tJSRRC race. Qullifying ii Friday.
' .,,.
Hamilton's 3-hitter Puts
W ashingwn Down, 4-2
Olaasy Gf>orge Brunet and bJs Angel mates will be 1booting for something neither bU experienced for aome time
-two wine In a r'1W -when they take
on the Wubingtoo Senators at
Anaheim Stadium tonight at 8.
The Jut time Brunet earned two
atraight pitching conquests •• July
30 and Aug. t, 1967 -wi1h Washington
tbe victim.
Bill Rigney's Halos haven't bagged
beck.to-back triumphs since Sept. 24-
25 Of last aeMOn when they dumped
JWmau City and Minnesota.
Left-banded Brunet (1.1) will be op-
poeed by Phil Or1ega of the Senat«a.
The Angell fioally got tog«her Mon-
day night u Jack Hamilton silenced
Quarry Says
He'll Chase,
Hit in Scrap
OAKLAND (AP ) -"Jerry, why
don't you ten us what you're going to
do?" Angelo Dundee asked jokingly
·when bis fighter, Jimmy Ellis, and
Jrry Quarry appeared at a luncheon.
Quarry, 22, who meets Ellis on
Saturday for the W«ld Boxing
Association beavyweigbt tit!e, only
smiled.
"I'm going to chase him and hit
him,'' Quarry stated later.
''.But if he fights differently I'll ad·
just. We think he'll be cautious.
"It won't be easy. Elllis can box and
punch and he's fast on his feet. I think
I proved in the Spoo<:er fight I'm fast
enough and that I can punch.
"On the other hand, I fear no man's
punch."
Quarry knocked Thad Spencer down
twice, once with a rigbt and once with
a left, and the WBA semifinal was
stopped in the 12th.
"I don't think I've ever seen a left
hand quite like his," said Floyd Pat-
terson, former heavyweight champion
who was decisioned by Quarry in the
first round Of the tournament.
"Jf!fr'fy throws that hook so fast I
don't think even he knows when it's
coming."
Quarry has recorded 15 k:noclcouts in
• 26-1-4 record. In his 31 fights, he bu
knocked oppo.neol8 dowt,1 'J7 tlmee.
Quarry's workouts during the past
two weeb have been gear«! to1fard
Ells' dancing style.
Ellis has a four-inch reach ad·
vantage end trainer Teddy Bentham
has continually urged Quarry tg hold
his hands farther out, especially ~hen
he ~ls away.
Does he think he can go 15 rounds ?
"I've been running three miles every
morning and have trained harder for
this fight than any other," replied
Quarry.
the Senators, 4-2, before 6,945.
Billy Hunter, the Ba11imore coach,
waa one of several baseball experts
who predicted this spring that the new
aoti•tball rules would h u r t
Hamilton.
"He can't get by without the spit-
ter." Hunter said. , •.
"I wooder what he'll say oowr '.
Hamilton mused Monday night after ,
be pttcbed a three-hitter and singled
home the winning nm.
The 2&-year--0ld rigbt·hander was the
center of numerous arguments last
season.
Rival batters complained that he
threw the spitball and umpires were
forever being asked to check the ball
for saliva.
"But I didn't go to my mouth a
single time tonight," said Hamilton
after he snapped Washington's fo~
game winning streak.
Hamilton employed three legitimate
pitches -fast ball, curve and
changeup -and was in such com-
mand that the Se.n.ators couldn't
manage a bit after they scored twice
in the second inning to go ahead, 2-1.
Hamilton, starting for the first time
A .. el SIGte
A"'1I D Al"'* WI W•llllnl!Olt 7:56 •""· ICM~ (71t)
Acri M Aneeb v. Whllf119l0n 7:56 •.m. KWO (~ » Aneelt v. Oeltland 7:56 p.m. IUl\l"C Intl ,
thb year after four relief stints,
became the first Angel pitcher to go
the route in 11 games this year.
"That's what we need JDOl"e ol,"
said Manager Bill Rigney, who had on·
ly 19 st.arti:ng pitchers go tbe distance
jn 161 games last year.
Roger Repoz stood out !or the Halos.
In the first inning, be clouted bls
third homer of the season. In the third
inning, be scored all the way from
first on a single by Jimmy Hall.
Then, in the aewmth, be walked and
scored on a triple by Chuck Hinton.
Hamilton's game-winning sing le
came in the fOUrth inning Off loser
Dick Bosman after Rodgers singled
and took second on a wild pitch. . •
Doubles by Mike Epst.ein and Ron
Hansen, plus Frank Coggins' sacri.fice
flly, produced the two Washington runs
in the second.
WASHINGTON CALll'ORNIA
all r 11...i
UnMr, cf ' 0 0 0 Scl\NI, Jb
Stroud. l'f ' 0 1 o F "'91»1, sa McMllll...... 311 ' 0 0 0 lllPOl. ct l" • .-.nt, If l I 0 0 J.H1ll, rf
Eodtl.n. lb l 1 1 0 RtlclMlntl, If
Hen-, u l 1 1 1 Hinton. lb Bryan, c l o t • Rodllen. c; Cooflins, lb 2 0 0 l l(noop, 21>
losl'Nn, p 2 o N J.Hlmll~. • Hl"lns, p G 0 v11 .... 11ne, 1>11 o o o
•• r It ,..,
' 0 1 11
' 0 0 0 3 3 l (
' . ' ' • • ' 0 • t '2 I
3 I 1 If
2 0 • 0
• t 1 I
81ldWln, p 0 0 0 0
Tot1ls u 2 3 2 Total& 31 • I • WHhlnotan . . • . . . . . . . 02t 000 000 -t
C1llfMnl1 . ..~ . . . . 101 100 IOIC -4
DP -C1lllornla I. LOB -W1s/ll"910n 2, C.11· lornl1 10. 2B -Stroud. Eomln, H1nse11, RtlQWlrctt.
Hinton. lB -Hinton. HR -Repoz (J). SF -
COll!llnt.
"' H R ER II SO ·. Boom.tin (L,0.2) ~Ill 7 J J 3 5
Hln lM 1·213 I I I t 2
8'1dWin I I o o 0 2
J. H1mllton tw.l~l f 3 2 2 2 4
HBP -""""-(ltodlPl!nl. WP -8011n1n. Time -2:2'1. At1wMeftee -6,9'.
Osteen Faces Bunning
In Pittsburgh Tonight
PITI'SBURGH (AP) W e s
P.arker's two.out double in the ninth
inning drove in the tying run and Zollo
Versalles followed with a two-run tri·
ple, giving the Los Angeles Dodgers a
S-3 victory over Pittsburgh Monday
night -their third straight win.
The Dodgers will send Claude Os·
teen { 1·2} to the mound Tuesday to op-
pose Pittsburgh's Jim Bunning 0·1).
The Dodgers trailed 3-2 when Tom
Haller led off the ninth with a tingle
off rookie reliever Bob Moose.
One out later, Len Gabrlelaon strok·
ed a pinch single, sending pinch run·
ner Paul Popovich to third. After
pinch hitter Rocky Colavito struck out,
Parker doubled to right, tying the
game. v ersalles then laced a drive over
center fielder Matty Alou's heed,
delivering the deciding runs.
. The Pirates took a 3-2 lead in the
sixth afte.r center fielder Wl1Ue DaviJ
dropped Gue Alley's fly ball for a
two-~ error.
A walk, a sacrifice bunt end an in·
tentiooal wait f.l1ed the bales before
Alley tc0red as Bil Mazeroski bounc·
ed into a force p1., and Alou 1Jnc.ted
home the go-ah~d run.
Jim Grant, winner J'un Brewer and
Jack Billingham, who pitched ~
runth, limi1ed the Pirates to three lrltl.
Grant made bis first National
League start for the Dodgers and ~
.... er Si.te
Aorll 22 -~ et ""'*'"'"· S:ae ICFI ('°"' Aprfl 2' -~ II "'"*'J':· S:OO ICl"I (~ 1JJI'" » -lln If ~ m>ci.co. 1:55 1(1"1 i&Ji"" 21 -~ It Sin Frtnclsc.o. 12:SS kl'I
<J/{1' 21 -Doclttrf et S.11 F111nci-1:t:SS ICl'I
six good inninp allowing the three
Pittsburgh hits.
Brewer oame tn for two innings and
struck out the ftnt five battlers he ..,,
end got the sixth on a pop Oy.
Blllingbam pitched the ninth and
held on to the victory without .Uowtni • bit.
Tbe ~tagged at least five of Moose's . for what looted like
bib but e Pirates made some great
defensive plays.
After the game, Parker said it was
me of the most frustrating ganes 'the
Dodgen have pi&yed thia year. ·
One of the PiNtet' great deteuiw
plays W'a8 on • Parter drive that
R<lberto Clemente ca~ ooe·handed.
leapnc • the fence to prevent a home nm. ,
I.OS AJllOILllS •rTTHltHM
~t to overlook the possibmty of IOC Postal Vote Ousts South Africa
•r II~ •r11.rM l'ntf', lb J 2 I 1 Wiiii. Jb 4 t t ....
VWAl!tl. M 4 1 1 2 Allff, • 4 I f 0 w.~ d s • t • c~ rt J 1 t • ,...,,.,, ft 4 0 I I llWMft, If t I t f ......_.,.._ a • t t I C"'*'-1. lb J t t t =~ -4 I 1 t ~--\ 2111 4 I t .•
Meaa -
TomoBT
I p.a. (S) CL -SDTING -
l)ICroft Devils at LA T·Blrd•. r.; plc.k t.ne at Olympic tracblde.
• WEDNtSf)AY
.. '7:• _p.a. (5) Cf -BJL.
S..ARDS -Mlnn. Fm vs.
Frankie Anlon.
' Ip.a (I) CF -FOOl'BA.LL
-~'BIU8111"int for Vktory!' dips
.. 08k1and Jtatdm..Hotalton
Oillr'I A.FL champioub.lp pme.
,.
I
... . .. " . .. -.
LAUSANNE, Swiberlmd (AP) -
South Africa la .i of tbe Mexico City
Olympic Gain•, tbe lnt.trnattoul Olyu\~c CommJUee M6cl WCS.y. Tk
lOC aald tt hat rec:tlnd the~ mlnimum of 31 votes approving lb
recommendlltion to withdraw South
Africa's tnvltatlon.
An IOC spokeaman said 11t lust 38
of the tOC's 71 members have thus far
voted in favor of btrrinC Soutb Africa.
thus ensuring the necetfAQ' simple
majoriti. The vote •11 hued cm e •ppeat
madt 1>1 u t.mertmeJ ....ton ol tbe
JOC's executive board Sunday urginJ
all IOC membert to agree to tbe
withdnwal Of an llwitation to South
Africa.
Th1I Mvmed 1he postal V'tQ taken
ln Grenoble, France, durin& the
Winter Ofymplc1 whlch re-admitted
South Africa to the Olympic Gemes
with a majority of ~.
Votef bave been trlckUng intA> IOC
heldquvttrs at the Lake Ge~a
cbatuu ol Vldy durlng the past two
days. Even a few h0UT1 after the 1¢-
tlon tabn by tbe tOC'• nlne-m.an e~·
ecutJve board It wa. r..ltar thall ft was
~~.'*' ot Ume before 31 vote. of mppauHa c.me ln. Jt .,., re.llably reported tbllt In tbe
Gcoble vote, 31 memben voted ln
,,.,. o1 re-ldmSttina South Alrioa.
MaD1 ot \be.II obvtoual.Y have cbanfed tbeJr mind.I this time.
Aa eucutive board member com-meatecl: "We appear to have been cerreet tn our belief that lll()lt people,
..-.Ver thelr penonal fee.Unga on
talf }asue. .ouJd not vott 1.gaJn.tt a
~ou recommendation of the
tOC'• uecuti•e bolTd." JOC olfld&ls contend the board
recommended a reverllll of tbe Greno-
ble ctecla1on not becauA al 8outh
Africa'• apm1hed polldet bla beca111e
It WU feared that Neial tension
dlroul)iout tile world would lead to
demol\ltrlltJons and even pbytical
violence against a South Alrlcan team
in Mexico.
But there seemJ little doubt that the main factor that sw"ytd tlle boa.rd
was the serious threat of a boycott of
the Mu.ico City Games. Oct. 12-27 by
at least 40 nations, including tbe Soviet
Union.
. . . . .. .
------~----._.._·--·· . . ... ---~ ---.. ~ ... -. -----
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TutSdly, April 2l, 1968 OAJLY PILOT J.J
Beware: Surf Business Is Costly
Dale Velzey TaSted Riches, Lost Enipire
Santa Ana College has released its official protest of
Golden West CoUege's alleged illegal football practices .
GWC ~tudent dean Dr. Dale Miller received the pro·
t~sl Monday, along with photographs taken March 26 ol
the contr<>versial practice sessions.
The two-page release says that Don athletic director
Bob Gaughran and a photographer from the Santa Ana
college newspaper saw and (>botograpbed ··wnal ap-
pears to be a flagrant and dehberate violation of Stale
Rule 9.013 which clearly stales that there shall be no
footbaU practice in any form between January 1 and
September 1, nor shall any football equipment be check-
ed out more than two days prior to September 1."
·Dr. Miller remains adamant that GWC is in the
right. IC lhe Eastern Conlerence decides that this is a
footbaU class. then we are clearly in violation of the
rule." he says.
"But we feel it is not a football class. In fact. the
class is continuing now just as it did before."
Photo Revelation
The photos reveal two dozen studenb attired in
shorts •nd football shoes playing football before
thrH Golden West football coaches. •
Although llOne are vi1ible in the stills, Sant•
Ana Hy• motion picture footage taken at the time
revHll tackling dummi11 beng removed from the
f~eld.
Santa An• hu not relHs.t the movie film ,
presumably waiting to show It when the m•tter will
be brought up officially, possibly at Thursday af-
ternoon'1 Eastern Conference m"tlng at Chaffey.
If ruled. guilty by fellow EC members, Golden
Weat would probably be slapped with a ytar's pro-
bation -the Hme penalty HMHed Santa Ana last
fell when it was found 9ullty of shady recruitint
pr•ctices.
In its deknse, Golden Weit is quick to point out
that only nine of the 22 students enrolled in the class
were on the 1967 football tHm end that two of those
will be gr•dueted in June.
Thr~e Coa~he11 Present
Sanla Ana hotly pursues from the angle that three
football coaches -head coach Ray Shackleford and
assistants Don Rowe and Fred Hoover -are shown
observing the practice. .
By EARL GUSTKEX
Of "" DtllY ...... , .....
In the late 1950'1, Dalt
Velzey was just aboul the
biggest name i.n surfinc. He
was grossing a quart~ of a
million dollars a y e a r
bu.ildW\g surfboards.
Now. 10 years later. be's
the foreman at Saddtet.ck
Mot'orcycle Patk a ear
Irvine Leke and he bas ad·
vice for anyone mt.ere¥ed in ~etting int-0 the rurfing
business.
"To J:et into tM surling
today you need a lot of
Mt. SAC
To Draw
Top Aces
WALN U T Top
performers from the world
or track and field are
scheduled to conver1e •t
Ml. San Antonio College
Saturday for the ~
day's action in tbe lotfi In·
nual Mt. SAC ReJ..ys, here.,
Fr.iday's events a r e
limited to high school aod
junior c o 11 e g • level
performers.
monef. a pr.ttr l'OOli rurf•
ing name and you have to be
I cnftlman," lie •71.
··1 overexttftded m~U
and Iott tvet1thJDt. By J~
I bed ~ people worldag foe
me, had Mven retail rbopa
and WU Jr'Ofllinl '251,000 &
year. We wwe 1Uming o\lt
l20 to UO bowdl a wetk."
Velzey, now •1, bellill
buildq WIOOden 9W'fboardJ
ln H~a Beedt &l 1947. ·
Theo· be and dlemllt Ted''
Thal i n t r o d u c e d the
fiberglass board in 1948.
Fiberglass gave surfing a
tertUk: boost and the sport
grew st&adily. but Veluy
expanded too qllllckly. ··r ran out of gas In 1960
and 1981 was ttie bl( year tor surfiog, ·• Veliey re-
oooots.
"I aold out ln '60 -one
year too eai-ly. In 1961
Hollywood put out the movie
'Gklget' and people like ~ruce Brown started mak·
Ing surflng documentary
films. The sport just ex-
plocled."
There are still Veluy
surfboards on ttle market
but tbey're prodooed by a
Ha•aitan firm. Veliey sold
his l\&me to t.he company in
'60.
Alter be relinquished his
empire. Veliey worked es a
surfboard destgner for other
board companies.
Amq those he's worked
ror is Gordie's Surfboard
Company o C Huntlngtoo
Beacll.
"Gord<>n Duane is a real
smart guy," Velzey says.
"He stayed smaH over the
years and tie's done very
well."
Velzey's Interests have '
left surff.ng now and he's
been swept up in the dune
buggy cca.ze. Bruce M~s.
invent« llnd builder of the
Meycs M-.x, 111 a co-owner
ol Slddleback Park.
"I ~ bufaiea," Ve lz.ey says.
"I take mine out in the
desert, into the hldl Sierras,
~ towna llnd all that
jau. I hunt bear and deer
and nave a great tlme.
"My son~ oow, but I
doo 't anymore."
HLL Yl'AlllC •ACI INl'lllH -,., w ...... ,. """' ll -IM Dey
CIMr I l'HI. l'tnt l"wt lt41 I'.#.
111a1T •ACI. I\<\ mllu. • vur
ollll and w. Cl1lmlne. ""l'M MOOt. TH Clalft'll"' 1>ria '2*.
Allt>erry IJ LamMr11 112
Mr ..... aM CJ CanHWl lie
Hit~ lllN" CH Jl"'-ll 111
1100 T,,. DrvrN CJ Gonulu l •lot
I'"' Hllfl Cll Garclt l 1<101
Comolett Cartlrol IW Harrhl 112 Safflowtr I J ArltrDUrn I IOt
Ytlmo (W Mal>otMY) IU
H COND •ACI. 6 tur~1. J Yllf
oM rnaldam, l'vru U.O.
lravt le41v IW Mtll«nn 2) llO
w1n An 1J s.11tr11 no
Torrid Ill 011>ri.11a1 110
ea111on1i. I OY CJ Gonu lell 1111s
CIMlrml,,. Wllth 111 Llvtmo<M I I IS
Dolly l•ktr C II Garcia I 11110
Gallant Wllllam CJ Lambert) UO
Gypl'f llovtr CO "'•re• II 12' Anrac (~ Venell UO
l tn Heck CA JaCk1..,I 129 "•tlv Kt1ltllr CW Harm.tit I 110 Jey•, Oovlllt uo
HollyparJ.t'. Hl
Entries
•
.. ... ....
l'rellk Cr! lo IG Hcrnan4tzl • ~
t usll lthYmtr CW 11orTll) • 'tll'
.. _rMUo IM Yanul • ~
!'Mine o. ..... IM Val ... welal I
Hurrken4 Gin IJ Seti.n 1 ,1'.W'
HVINTH 11ACl.7 f\lrl-J~ t 9'cr
olds. AllowUKtS. Pline .... 'Clfy
of H-EIMI M. Lyne.II CllaMw.
ltlvef l voy IM Yanet) UO
°'1111 Tracer CD H1Hl 116
C.,.ld Dtln<:td f D Vtl•Jat1<PZI I"
"leuJno Thou1111t ID P~rc•l 116
l rooocl ShadoWl (W Mahotney) 120
... ,..., Son IJ Gonulul 11111
L-rlCklo (W Htr"'411l) ~·
llGHTH aACE. 6 turl..,llJ. ~ a. martt • ~a" o4d a<'d UP C • 119CI l llowances. Pun• SI0,000,
Guldanu Le nut. •
Miu Kai Bird CD Hall) MO
CMnl'• ~m (J Stllenl ,_,
Mal»I'• HCH'ltY CJ Gonulul ""' Meved• Marve CJ Lamber11 110
Somellody Siiecl•I fM Lanell ' Ito
ltollclem Ey"' (0 Pierce) 1'0
NINTH RACE. Ont mllt °" !lit tvrl.
"The presence of three adults. who are believed to
be coaches make it unlikely that it is just a regular P.
E. class for the purpose of physical conditioning," the
Heading the· outetandiflg
group of stars is Randy
Matson , tbe Texas
powerhouse who hol<b the
world shot pllt record at 11·
51h, is ranked No. 1 in world ~I":" ..... ....::!~ •111 ant1111e 11 .. 1c1 l'IMI Cll CamNO 120
I UOl'O Domenico CD "'•re. 21 no
J year old'-Clalmlng, Pvr'M $7500.
T• cl1iml-nt prlct '20,000.
WI"' Command•• IJ S<lllerJ) 11•
Jorule llOY ID Vel .. Q""'' 116
report says. .
"The members of the Golden West ~thlel;ic. alaf!.
knowing the rules. hav~ ~illuUy_ and. knowm.gly lJUtiated
and continued an actJVJty whtch LS specifically Pi;?-
hiblted by both state and Eastern Co.nfere~ce rule .
The report is signed by Santa Ana president John
Johnsonn, who is also president of the Eastern Con·
ference. The most recent precedent for lhe case now before
the EC occurred at Mt. San Antonio College in the 19&5-
fi6 school year. Mt. SAC was believed to have been
discovered conducting faU baseball practice.
The EC then appears lo have entered into '°,lfe sort
of j?entleman's agreement, whereby baseball techni·
nue" classes were not lo be offered in the fall, the same
~pplvinP. to footbalJ classes in the spring.
GoldPn West must prove. of course. that the class In
nuestion is not a "football class," but rather, as they
claim a conditionin~ class. .
in bis spedally, aod 1.s the
current bolder of t h e
prestlgioua Sullivan Award.
Betides Mateon t b e
relays, flat races, and field
event. will be aplced with
the names ol seven other
stars who are ranked firtt in
the world In their events.
'Ibe o t be r top.ranked
athletes who have been llned
up by Relays Director
Hilmer Lodge lnd ude loft«
jumper Ralph B o s t '-n ~
sprinters Jimmy Hloe• ( 100
meters), and TommJe Smith
(200 met«s), Lee EvaM
(400 meters), Jntermediate
hurdler Ron WhJtMy ( 400
meters), high hurdler Willie
Davenport ( 110 meters l.
and high jumper E d
Caruthers.
The t UpporUDI cul will
larHln Day (W Mal!ofNY II no
THlllD •ACI . s '"''-" 1 war ~ "'411dtn colts i MkllM1 b,..d '"
C111tornl1. CllllTllM. ""'" ...000.
Hunery Ge<lrve IW Moltorney) II•
Shlnlnt Count 10 P~rcel 112
War Flito IW Mtrma111 116
llfflltable CJ GonUl<!ll 1110•
Cltrll T,. R CJ L1m~r11 114
C101rn1,.. ••Ice 110.000. ------------0\lllt-ft CJ Ar1trbvrftl 111
Mr. "\lftelval Cll c:. .... u l 117
f'ull Dreu IJ TNllllol 111
lie Cliff CW l!UhorMY1 111
Eleflty Eleht It..,. CJ Lt mber1 21 117 1,.., Admire! 117
Nlmbo CW HtrrnelZ) 117
..tltr'I "•n<• 10 Hall I) 117
Tono ,.a,_ IL. Gllllt•nl 117
AllaM I OY (M YtNI 2) 117
F11mlno Ob1n11°" co L-1 111
Coolaln l u• CM Valtnrvtlol 111 •
'"" r:lltlltl• Fakltt CA Maotl 117
Soet<I Maclllnt ID Holl 21 Ill
lltvtl'• lltward ID "l•rctl 111
Loot 1 001 u L11n11tr1 11 111
Joroo IJ G<>t!talerl •111
lhotd Ind••" IM Y•~l II J 11
"0Ulll H a.ac1. I rurtono. 2 1<ur olro. Anow .. 1cts. ,..,,.. Meet.
h lltlul llOll I It Oeb<~ll•I 170
llolO l~rust f 0 l'l•l'C•) 110
tndl•" Shot CJ G0t>1~lttl >109
S1lud V Ptltlu CJ Sellcrsl 170
Sltlleko CJ Arftrburnl 170
11111• lloyal c 0 V1IHCIV'1) llA
l \/. DOllbletallt IJ Latnbtr1) 114
WASHINGTON SENATORS Shackleford maintains that any football playmg
done by class members was done after. the ,~lass was
ove r and that a football was on the premises less than
one-tenth of the time." al90 bebri~an(. ---------------------------------------------------------""™ llAC•. • f\lrl..,ts. 2 vur nld tn•ld•ns. Pun• ISOOO. lut>d1v
Club ol Newpor• lu~h.
Tonight t nd Tomorrow
Night -8 p.m. Shou, Dumm~•
Santa Ana then points to the UM of football sh~•
by clau members and the uH of tackling dummies.
"The football shoes belonged to students •nd the
tackling dummies were used simply u obstacles,"
Miller aays. .
Miller decires the whole episode. .
"It's upsetting to me that such a ~ISp~o~or·
tion•t• amount of time must be spent on th11 with ell
the other more important things we have to dul
with In education. . · h "And Santa Ana'1 handling of this affair es
bffn quite immature. The day they broke the .1tory
in their student newsP41per, they brought copies of
the fNper over here and d istributed them all over
the campus. . Id I d t ''That's the kind of behavior that cou . ~a ,~ ~alism. Fortunately, it didn't happen th11 time.
Area Sports
Thursday
T r a c I< -Estancia at
Calendar
Brea. T..oara at Costa Mesa.
Magnolia at C o r o n a del
Mar, Westminster at Santa
Ana Valley. Huntington at
W.arina, Lagima at Villa
Park (all at 3: 151. Newport.
Golden West, OOC and UCI
al Ojai Tournament.
The shof put field will hi·
elude Neal Steinhauer and
Ge<>rge Woods, who have
both been over the 68-foot
mark. When they last faced
each other o u l s i d e .
Steinhauer defeated Matson
and will be gunning for
another upset Saturday.
fn addition to CaruttleN.
the high jump ernaots will
include Gene Johnson. John
Rambo. John Hartfield, and
Otis Bu1Tell. Aft h a v e
cleared the 7-foot barrier.
Boston is due to get a
severe test fTom auch world
ranked 1ol:.g jump stars a~
sensational youngster Jerry
Proctor 17th) and Bill Miller
'10th). Jn a s pecial
ceremony durlng the meet
&oston will be hooored for
his contributions to track
and fle1d .
Many more of the nation'"
track and field great« will
converge on Mt. San Antonio
College's Memorial Stadiwn
in Walnut, California. to test
their dlance5 of landing
berths on I.he 1968 United
States Olympic Team.
LB Troph y
Cee Result~
, ..
ICJl>.-1. lltV" fSonor•1 l Cc•d"•
CS-al i. C•ld«on tCoach•tl•I 4
Alcovr cs.n ~rcMI s G .. I cs ...
!'Mrcotl. T'-: 10 •.
1-1. C«derv (Sor\Orl ) l Rt•"
(lono<al J, H•rri< IMDf'tno V•ll•vl
4. Cal<Mr.., (CoKMll•I }. P•n1 (COi
CMll•l. Tl~: It 6 *-!First race I I. H•nd• (r •II·
br«*l 2. Loov CCoacMll•I l Gob'>•
fSO'IOf'I) '· Yovno I IC•l•li•I 5 l •uO• Cl'trrl1I. Tim<: l·lO • (Sf<CHl(I •dC.,
I. Pfau COran11t Glenl 1 E•I•• 1F1
C>oudol J. Sandcw•I CCoochrll•) •
Coat< IVISl•l s. Hock (Sonorol l•m•
I ·JI 5.
ll»-IFl"I ,.<•I ' Volktr f(•orll•l 7. l(lrtr IS&ddltback I l ( AtloMn
CLot Alamllotl 4. Mendor• IV1>1~I I
Wion ICoron.tdo). Tim<! 3 11 I IM .. f
recordl. (Second roe.I l B••'"Y (I(>~
reno Vollf!VI 7. Rodrtouer IF•llbroool
) Delee~ teoron•dol •. At•u ,,.,
CIM>llol 5. L•mbt!rl CL<11un11. fMfPI
record!. Time: 3:23.1.
120 IH-1. Croh•n 1Sonoro1 ? P·"
IVlll•I l. Oewson (Ou no• Gl•n l •
Oel.eon CL°' AlamilotJ j ,t.lcovr
Ch n Marc0<l. Tlme: HJ.
t40 Relay-I, S-a 7. C°"ch•ll1 J
l'ollbrootr. 4. Saddlebac:ll S. IC•l•ll•
Time. •• •.
Final KOre: Sonora 0 . Or•"°''
Git<\ JI, C""cl>tll• 11, F•llbrOOi 14,
IC11tlla 12, $an Marcoo U, \11111 '·
Corona del Mar . Costa Mesa
at Fountain Valley, Hun·
Ungton at N e w p o r t •
Westminster at Mari n a .
Mission Viejo at Laguna.
Mater Dei at Verbum Dei
Call at 3:15). Baseball Standings
AA Fuel Dragsters
. A ilu, for $4,000 Purse
Curra llov CD Hall) 170
Furv ... Kl ... IM Vtlennit••I 170
IClno ICllO•re cw M•hotMY) 170
Glorious Vlcfo• ID P•t rctl 110
Sun Run""' IM Yentr) llO
Nlclml•nlo CW Harri>! 110
llultr Sweu IJ Gon1tl•1 II >llJ
Nlet MIU1h CJ L•mborl I) 170
lh•tvll•h SPv IJ Stlltrol 110
Jvmln flt Gama l x•U
Conn«11,_. IA Ma.at! 170
tll'•rtJ • .,.,,., .. -• ""' '",..,.. ~ M,;t,lfl -~ • ·~ tliit;"'' ..,I/IX Con
.. Mllill~l• ~t l'.•"Ht~&lf!lt C.~ 11,,1, oaoc~ .,.,._~ '«:•h.M•"-'""·c:.:lf..
Tootr Otnltl CW Horma1tl 170 ;===========:; Ats. Elltllllt A Ca!lh pr11e or $4.000 will Bakl'rsfield. Chorm.no ,, .. , fJ L•ml>trl 21 170 SHARP
.. _ d "' HOI'• ""°"' CJ Gclfu1le1 21 ... , If . L t .J be on Ille hne Saturday night OCIR record ,..,J er 'om ,.,.,,. .. "'°"'''"" Ill c.,,,. .. , tlll you,. • 1narp ,..,.,, ., ..
I 30 r " th McEwen of Long Beach will •he 0.AILY PILOT'S fe111ou1 or 0 ,~ 0 u e r n llXlH llACI. °"' mile .., i... turf Oime·A·lin• classifieJ edt
C l'f . ( l t AA ( I be et U:ie W'heel o( hi& Kenny l .,. • ., •left c1a1n11,.. "urw moo Setvrd aw1. Mak• • b•tter Jul a 1 ornia s as es · ue Linley six-second proJ'ectile 100 <1••m1,.. ... 1c. no,ooo. vo11t~ ' Co , .. whether you're bll)'int of dragsters at Orange unly Saturday night a c ti on ~~~~' 1~ g".},.~.~-:·· •111 .. 11;n9•
Internat1ooal Raceway. _:s~tar~ts~a~t_7'...:;.':..30~·:._ _____ _::_'"'::::h•::_•_:•:·:-:....:.:co:...:.:"':":":..:.' ___ ,::":.:.' ..:::=========== All the maohi.nes pre·
emered in the lop fue11 .. ---.. • eliminator races will be
pa ired and run side·by·side
in the first roood o! rlimina .
Lions.
Thw, fans unable to al·
l e n d Saturday afternoon
quali£ying sessions will be
able to eee the entire field in
the evening.
A Saturday entrant is the
NHRA Wtntemational top
fuel chami*>a W " r r e n • Coburn-Miller machine of
Tennis -Newport Harbor
Hlgh. Golden West. OOC and
UCI at Ojai Tournament.
AMERICAN• LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
Swimming Southern
California JC Tourney at
Santa Ana (1). Crestview
League finals at Foothill
(3: 151.
Baseball -California
Baptist at S o u th e r n
CallfomlA College.
Frklay
Bueball -VaJenda at
Estancia. Corona del Mar at
lrtagnoUa. Brea al Fountain
~alley. Mater DeJ at St.
Paul. Lacuna at Villa Park. $aMa Ana Valley a t
w~mt.r. Western at
Newport., Marine at Hun·
tinplD (all .t 3:15), COsta
11 ... at toen (1), ~ SAC
• Golden Wut. oa; at
w
Detroit ........ 9
Minnest0a . . • . . . 7
Boston ... ·••·· 6 Baltimore ..... 6
Washington ..... R
New York ....... 5
Cleveland ...... 4
CalifOl'nia .• : ... 4
Oakland ........ .4
Chicago ........ 0
L Pct. GR
1 .900
3 .700 2
4 .600 3
4 .llOO :I
5 .545 31n
5 .500 4 e .400 5
7 .:t64 51~
7 .364 5'A.a
!I .000 8'r'l
w L
St. Lou1s ...... 7 4
Los Angeles ... 7 4
San Francisco .. 6 5
Atlanta . .. 6 5
Philadelphia .... 8 6
Cincinnati ...... 5 5
Houston ......... s 5
Pittsburgh 5 5
New York ....... 4 7
Chicago ... 3 7
Pd. GB
.636
.583
.545 l
.545 t
.500 l'I.&
.500 1 "' .54)0 I ~ .soo 11n
.:t&t :I
.300 3i..t
POUND FOR fltOUND
DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR THE
MOST LUX URIOUS SPORTS CAR
HUH SILICTIONlf
COLONY 'AH
STATION WAG.ON
u l INC°'-N CONTINlNTAL 'MAOC A sr•TION WAG<>fj nus WOULD .. IT
YACATtON TIMI IS
•tOVQ THI COINH , • , . , . rn TIMI TO CHOOSI
THI CONTININTAL Of
STATION WA~ Chaiff11( .... et3). ..--------------....---------
Track -Go&den West, J 0 H N S 0 N A S 0 N OOC. Corona del M a r ,
Lquna. Wutmintter, <Mta
MeN, Newport tn(f Foun·
ta1n Valley •t Mt. SAC OMN$l COUl'O'Y'S O\HIT UTAIUJMD llNCOUt • MllCUIY. COU•AI MAUI
Relays.
Tennfs -~andt M -ct 0 t I D V~, FOUDCUl Vallq It ._. __________ _.'8
M WIST COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH J4t.nS1 M2.o9t1
IUNOAY -
------..-......-.---------------------~-----~----------------------------_,.-----~~-~----~----..-. --------....-..------~ ..
-------..._.._~---
I z DA.ll. y PILOT
. \
T~. April 23. 1%8
THE BROADWAY'S
CURlb CAPTURES
THE CHARM OF
THE MEDITERRANEAN
reg. 129.95 99 • 9 5
.The rich warmth 9f a 'dark oak finisR
highlights this che(ished cabinet. Intri-
cate designs and rich overleys recap-
ture the romance and charm reminis-
cent of the beeutiful Mediterranean
countries. Features enclosed storage at
the top to preserve and show all your
most prized possessions. 'I 7x 11 x66''
high. 6.00 monthly.
Furniture, 38
SA VE 50.00 ON 5 PC.
PARTY SET IN RICH
FRUITWOOD FINISH
_Bi Mom• cf ¢elifomia
ng.21us 179.95 5 pc!.
. .
Romentic MeCJiterranean mood is expressed beautifuTiy in Hie ricli frvif-
wood finish tnat highlights this smart party set. Add black vinelle
I
upholstered chairs end stain-resistant Neva-Mer tops for e memorable
~roupin9.1ndudes 42'' oda9onel table and 4 chairs. :.Just ;i 0.00 monthlY.•
Fw&6a .. 92
' . .
NEWPORT tlJNTINGTml IAOt
~ -................. ~ ..... , ............ a.!!!r~---
..... . . ·-\. ' '" ·.
TAKE A SEAT • ; •
IN 0UR SMART
HI BACK VELVET CHAIR
reg.129.95 99.95
Sit back, relax ena enjoy tn• plush com·
fort of this decorator chair. Ideal to use
in pairs. Reversible seat, cushions, but•
ton atteched pillow and distressed
fru itwood finished wood frame add to
its beauty. +4'' taR. Covered in soff
cotton velvet in celadon, copper, gold
and olive. 6.00 monthly.
Furniture, 38
ANAHEIM
4'4 N. £ue:nd e Allltlelm
Anlhetm Sllo99lnl Cent. ,....... S>WUt
lf>SCIAI. &At.• STOite MCKMI: Ml A.IA. 19 tt» .. .-. ..._...,.T~.~-.~ .,.. ,_..,, All'• it "-"" n
•
...... -..;.,;,--_.. . .
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
,_...,, N rtl U, 1HI Na.CM , ... ta
Brunch Fetes
Debs, Dads
Learning the importapce of the Empire Debutante Ball will be
debutantes and their fathers when they tour the South Coast Child
Guidance Clink, which financially benefits from the event.
T~e father-daughter orientation will take place next Sunday.
and also will include a lour of the Treasures 'n Trinkets Thrift Shop,
a continuing ways and means project of the ball sponsor , the clinic's
Harbor Auxiliary.
Afterward brunch will be served in the Five Crowns restau-
rant, according to the chairman, Mrs. Ernest Marrs.
Debutantes. who will be presented to sociecy June 21 in the
Balboa Bay Club. are the Misses Cozy Hamilton. Diane Adele John-
son, Patricia Louise Kemp. Donna Jean Lee. Laurel Rae Lloyd,
Marcia Ann McKerren. Sondra Lee Osterhoudt. Shawn Elizabeth
Slocum. DelJyn Eleanor Binswanger. Linda Marie Fansler. Susan
Carol Shafer and Kathleen Diane Glockner.
Their fathers are Jack K. Hamilton. Owen B. Johnson, Harry
Kemp, Lawrence H. Lee, Frank W. Lloyd, John J. McKerren, Mel-
vin A. Osterhoudt, Max W. Binswanger, Charles V. Fansler, James
L. Shafer and Francis H. Glockner.
Assisting Mrs. Frank Marshall, balJ chairman, are the Mmes.
IMPORTANCE OF BALL -Learning about the services at the
South Coast Child Guidance Clinic and why it needs financial sup-
port, such as Empire Debutante Ball proceeds, will be 1968 debu·
tantes and their fathers. Caught up in the excitement as the ball
date, June 21, nears are (left to right) Miss Marcia Ann McKer-
ren and her father, John J. McKerren, Miss Shawn Elizabeth
Slocum and Miss Dellyn Eleanor Binswanger.
Thomas Crosson. Allen T. Heims. Charles Kelley, Edward H. Parker,
Flave B. Gibbs. Louis Pratt. Leon Fry, John P. Wright, Harvey
Pease, Danny McKeever, William C. Holmes. O. E. Howland. Mc-
Kerren, Leslie Petersen, Evan Prichard. Homer E. Howard and
Marrs.
Junior Ebells Unearth Precious Gems
Treasures of the Sea is the
glistening theme selected
for the 1968-69 club year or
Newport Beach J u n i o r
Ebe Us.
Its appropriateness i s
underlined by the ·accolades
earned by and given to very
precious gems w h o s e
devoted service throughout
the past year bas polished
their brUUanee to out.shine Mrs. Murar. who has
all others -thus they were given 178 hours of service
selected. ·•CH i te'1J ~ and~ will a1tetfd the di s.lrict ~·
Member-of-the-year. vention in the Edgewater
Deserved crowns and ex-Inn, Long Beach next Fri-
pense-paid trips to co n-day and Saturday.
ventiom h~v.e bee11 awarded Her major contribution to
to Mrs. James Murar, win· the club was to the health
ning provisional member commlltee. For t b T e e
and to Mrs. Warren Fix, months of the summer, one
outstanding citizen. day a week was spent at the
Santa Ana National Foun-
dation oific• .. _,She also gave
one day • rftntlf throughout
the club year lo Orange
County Prenatal Clinic. Also
worth mention was her Lime
spent as aJ·ea leader and
collector for the March of
Dimes. Art. safety and ways
and means projects also
b e n e f i t t e d from her
services.
Giving more than her full
share of hours, Mrs. Fix is
• credited with 811 -the
grand total of the entire
membership is 6.966.
TREASURES OF THE SEA -Selecting precious stones to match projects
for the coming year are (left to right) Mrs. James Casey, incoming second
vice president and Mrs. Edward Whitehouse, who will be installed Junior
Ebell president next month.
With unequaled abilities
and energy, her titles were
many as were h e r
responsibilities. As second
vice president, her duties in-
cluded holding progtam.
federation development and
ethics and a m e n i t i e s
chairmanships and serving
as historian. She also is
district treasurer. co·
chairman of the Big Si~lcr
organization and is Oen
Leader Coach of Cub Seoul
Pack 330.
The latest of her effort~
has been the Junior A11x-
iliary advisor to Elysians. a
service organization of Cor-
ona de! Mar High School
students. The mother of four
will represent the club at
state c o n v e n t l o n in
Bakersfield next month.
Mrs. Fix also will scrvP as
the club's first vice pres i·
dent next year. assurin~ a
strong right hand for Mrs.
Edward Whitehouse who
will receive the gavel durm~
an installation luncheon
May 29 in the Stuft Shfrt.
AJso serving on t h e new
board will be the Mmes.
James Casey and Paul
Hadley. second and third
vice president.a ; A 1 I e n
Goody and George Hauser.
r e c o r d i n g and cor-
responding secretaries; -
Henry S t o t s e n h e r ~ .
treasurer. and C h a r I e s
Chapman. auditor.
Mrs. Murar. alon g w i t h
other provisionals. w i I I
perform their final duty at
the 10 a.m. brunch next
Thur s day . Traditionally,
they present an entertaining
skit at the end of the year.
prior to their being welcom -
ed to the rank of full-fledged
members.
Members of the cast will
be the Mmes. R o b e r t
Basham. Larry Mitchell and
Harlow Richardson . who
have just begun their pro-
visional year. while ar-
rangements are being made
by the Mmes. M u r a r ,
Rkhard Acton. John Bates,
Robert Batson. R o n d e I I
Hansen, Leonard J o n e s ,
Eugene Kovach and W. J.
Mozeley.
Addin g a special nole to
the meeting will be the
honoring of past presidents
and coordinators.
Mrs. Gus C h a b r e .
Americanism chairman. will
report on the success of the
clothing and e q u i p m e n t
drive for the new baby of a
teen-age mother, whose hus-
band now is serving in Viet-
nam, while Mrs. Stotsen-
berg, health chairman, will
reveal the new commitment
of the Juniors -that of
stafftng the newly initiated
immunization clinic. con-
ducted in the Odd Fellows
Hall, Costa Mesa.
J)pne in conjunction with
the Well-baby Clinic. im-
munitatJons will be given
free of charge from I to 3
p.m. on the fourth Monday
of the mon th. The program
was launched yesterday.
ROY AL HONORS -Mrs. Frank Hughes. president of Newport Beach Junior
Ebells presents a crown to Mrs. Warren Fix. member-of-the-year, while Mrs.
James Murar (left). Citizen-of-the-year emphasizes budgeting time is the
important phase of giving service. Mrs. Murar earned her title by contrib~ing
178 hours to club projects while Mrs. Fix contributed 811 hours to community
service. Total club hours amounted to 6,966 for the entire year.
Length of Boy's Hair-Means of Measuring H.is Rebellion
DEAR ANN LANDERS: OUr 17-
year-old I01I Larry wants to wear his
hair longer than his father thinks be
1bould. Fer yeara his father used to cut
the boy's hill' but lately haircut tim.e
bas produad IUCb terrible filbts that
my husband baa told the boJ be will
not cut 1111 hair AD)'IDQA -he'll have
to go to a barber aod pay for bis
haircut.I out of Im allowance.
I had a private Lilt wltb Llrry and
he told me be bates to be dlffereist
from the ober boya at achool. Ht M)'t
11\0rt balrcuts are conatdved equare
and that's all tberr la to it. He made It
clear he doa not Wlllt to wear hit halr
so long tbat hls eat:\ are covered up
but he does Wee bangs (whicll I think
are fricJIUul) and be also likes a full
ANN l..ANDERS ~
look in the back.
AM. 1 am so sick and tired of Usten-
iltg to my son and his father argue
about hair 1 could scream. Several of
my frleodl tell me the)' are having the
tame trouble. Please, once and for all.
Nttle thls ln your column. Do you think
a boy's haircut Is important enough to ngM about da.y and nlght? Do you
lh!nlt parents have the right to insist
that a t.Mn-agt son wear his hair the
way &lle7 lhJn.k t\e should. If you
would devote a few paragraphs to this
subject pa.rems of teen-agers au over
the country would bltss you. -
BESIDE MYSELF
DEAR 8.: Hatr It• '*9me one or
Ute most paulonately uclled 1ubjrcts
of oar llme -r11khtr Ualrd after Vitt·
Dim and tb.t race rlott.. I have !'fcclv·
ed t~a11nd1 flf ~tter1 f r o m
AJtdlenft l• A11U1 -leCtera frnm
dlatrau,.t fathra, exlta.as&e4 motber'I
BDd embattled tttn·a,era. S & m e
readers have 1ent pboto1raph1 ((roat
and back) aod asked, "Do you tblak
lids la tot ton1?"
I beUeve tbe maJe teen-age craze
f• 1001 balr 11 ~ tn fa) tbe desire
t• look like tbe otber gay1 18' (b)
rebelUoe against parent., 1oclety or
wltatever &llty ltappea to be flgbUni.
fte Je.nctb Of the boy•a hair It a lood
mean1 of meaHrtng a b • y ' 1
rebeWou1ne11. Tiie klcl wbo weart Illa
hair 10 10111 U.at be attracts 1tart:11
from tllranfers 11 11ylng, "See.
nobody can tell ME what to do."
lf y04lf aoa nt1 thb de1cr4p(lea I
ree.mmeod tbe folto,irlnf: Keep qalet
•Nut Ills hair. Mate It clear lte can
wur ht• halr In bani• dow1 to hfa
note and braids to bis shoulders If he
w11ta to, but be most give It a weekly
dlalftpoo. AJ10, let him know U be gets
In trouble wttb the school authorities
because of hit hair It will be hi• trou·
hie and not yours.
Schools not only have tbe right· bat
tbe obUratlon to set 1urnd1rda and
mate nlea. Some 1cbool1 lgnore hair,
edaer 1cbool1 have 1peclftc rept1-
tlon1. U the boy 11 told to cut hl1 hair
or not come back It mU'lt be his
ded1lo1 1.1d be muat accept tbe con·
1eqaence1. -Pet10D11ly. I 111'11b the crtw cut
'Would burry back. ll'1 neater and
c~aner. But the style today I• longer
1'11r and most tfds want to be In style.
One di.)' (If Y" 1top buHtai lalm ),
your teen-age son wO.l cat bPa balr, bat
It has to be HIS Idea and not )'OUfL
Whee that day comes you will bow
Uaat your boy baa made an important
step In the transition from adole1coc:e
to manhood.
Unsure of yourself on 1.1a"" t what's
right? What's wrong? Should you?
Sholtldn't you? Send for A.nn Landera'
booklet "Dating Dos and Don 'ts,"
enclosing with your requeit . cents IA toin and a lc,ng. self ddressed.
stamped envelope.
Ann Landers will be gla to belp yoi
with your problems. Send them to Mr
In care of the DAILY PILOT, enc&ol-
lng a self-addressed, •tamped e•
velope.
r
)
MRS. B. L. AND!RSON
Former Wendy Booth
• ~; Newlyweds to Reside
~
In Huntington Beach
Weody Bootil and Benton
Lee Anderson exchanged
vows and rings in the
Newport Beacb b<lme ol her
parents, Mr. a Mrs.
Wendell Booth.
The Rev. Willis Booth, the
bride's uncle, 11<>letnnized
the ceremony in t h e
presence of Ult lmmediete
f.am.ily.
Given in maniage by her
fallher, the tlride selected a
snort wbite cnpe pn with
long sleeves ot white lace
and a white lace maollilla
he~. h CSried an
armful ol ~ beauty
roses. ., Maiicl"' ............
Karen Sue Aategreeo. ·She
was attired iD a reel velvet
long sleeved A·ine gown
with a wbb 1aot eon.. Sbe
carried a bouquet ct lollC
stemmed white l'OIM.
Sentng • belt mm wa
R. WayD#J BllfOb, John
Heying was o~st end
Mn. W i 11 i a m Koltovich,
cousin of tbe bride, wae
llOloist. Atter the ceremony a
recepticlo for 125 was gW'en
in the Mesa Verde Country
Club. Assi6ting We!"e ~ Miss
Karen Vogel, who ciroolated
the guest book, end Mrs.
Koltovicll. Miss Madelyn
Szep of New York City,
oous:in of ttle bride, was a
special guest.
The bride attended the
University of CalifUnia,
Santa Barbara, where she
atffiliated with Delta Gam· ma . aor<ll'ity.
Ber illllb8Dd, eon o f
Richard V. Anderson Of
Royal Oak, Mich., and the
llwte Mn. Andersoo i.s a
gradua1e of Michigan State
University .and is en elec·
trical engineer. The
newlyweds will make th&ir
home in Hunting.too Beach.
Couple to Exchange
Vows in July Rites
A July 20 ceremony In
Huntington Beach 1Altberan
Church will umte in JDar9
, riage Andrea Lanllabo Ind
Larry LaMc« MarcblDt 0(
Long Beadl.
Newtolb~ • ' eve.at,, ....... daring
a fllDllY per;, ta 1he
ant.to bame " Mr. llld Mn.Ra~ .... .. ol the beDedk'Hlect
'lbe bridMM!e, .......
ol Mr. aDd Mn. Andrew
Lwlll>o of HUDtiD&'toa
BMcb, II • cradUate of Sier-.. -ra w,b Scbool llOd a bemty
co Deft.
Jffr ftMa • • .,..iuate
of Obaffey Hl&b School, at·
tended LeV.-ne College IJld
preeeutly .. maJortal in ecooocmc:s a t California
State CoUece at L o D C
Beam.
Betrothal
Mr. and Mn. George
Aithur Hart ol IGtcheaer,
Ontario, canada, hlWe an-
• ntMJDCed Ule engagement of
their dau~. Mary
Eliiabeth Hart to Peter
FM<lerick Srnittl, son of. Mr.
and Mrs. Allan Smith of
Costa Mesa.
The bludlct.eled ii a gr--. • PlrT7 ~
ANDREA LANSIAHO
To Join BrlclH
Announced
HiCh School, Part)' Sound.
Ootario, Oenada, a o d
Orange Cout College.
Tile ma.ITiage will late
place Saturday, May 11 in f
Harcourt Memorial United
Church. Guelph, Ont:ariu.
Oaoada.
Pacesetter
Horoscope
Taurus: Finish
WEDNESDAY.
APRIL 2~
By SYDNEY OMARR
"The wile man coDtrols
his destiny. . .Astrology
pointJ the way.••
ARIES (March 21 · April
191: Cycle ltigh. Means
lunar position favors new
starts in riew directions.
Take the initiative. Be
original and independent.
Welcome ·fresh contacts,
challenges.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Finish projects. Work
in background. Means you
g.ain ttiroug:h modest ap-
proach. No day to blow your
own b<>~. If s i n c e r e •
dedicated, o~s will do this
for you. Co-Operate with
club. group.
GEMINI (May 21 • June
20): lndlvidual you are al·
tracted to pays meani~ul
compliment. Day accents
hopes, wishes, f r i e n d s .
Income }>9tential from oc·
cupation also commands at-
tentloo. Prestige combines
with something enjoyed.
CANCER (June 21-July
22): Minor obstacles could
boomerang in your favor.
Superior notes your reaction
to cballeDge. Respond at·
oordingJy. HlPUPt career,
prestige, standing hi com·
munity. Stick to princlple1.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22):
Your chance for •\IC«~• is
enhanced through opposite
sex. Turn on charm. Be
vital. Emlbit p e rs o n a 1
magnetism. Speak up con·
cernl nl cb1n1e1 ,
s a l e s m a nablp. Pml\le
creative endeavon.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22):
Check detallt. Don't be tied
down to red tape. Be
thorough witho~ being dull.
Accent sense of balance.
Check acoowrts. Or&anize
financial_ efiorts.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Stress on m a r r 1 a g e ,
partnership, heal
agreements. Key ii better
communicatJoo. State cate
clearly. Don't permit others
to twi'S't your meaniqa.
Study TAURUS meua1e.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21): Your home, family,
ability to relate ill> loved
ones spoWgbted. Ji'iX ttim11
around the house. Streu
safety measuret. People
wtlo serve you 1bould be
complimented.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Some «l'OllDd you
New Pledges Honored
At Sorority Meeting .
New pledges will be pin-
ned during ceremonies to be
conducted at 8 p.m. Thurs·
day, April 25, in tbe Foun-
tain Valley home of Mrs. Al
Hackmeister.
HOOOl'ed by ~ Beta
Gamma chapter, Epsilon
Sigma Alpha, will be the
Mmes. G e or g e Freiwald,
Larry Evans, Jam es
Hunter, Micky F 1 y n n,
Robert Hastings, Louis Bac-
ca, Helen Poe and Eleanor
Rupple.
Pinning the pledges will
be Mrs. Everett Gillespie,
California State recording
secretary for t h e in-
ternatiooal sorority.
Fir&t pearl awards, given
during tbe fil"St year to
membera who have earned
an accumulatioll ol 1000
points in educatial and
pbi}anChropic activities, will
be i:nseoted by M r s .
William Guthrie, firlt vice
presjdent of Beta Gamma
chapter.
Receiving pearls Ylll be
the Mmes. George Keller,
welfare chairman; Clarence
Nelson, ways and means
chairman; William Hewston
and Robert Speth.
Receiving her finlt Pallae
Athene award f« outftan·
ding c-0ntrlbutions to the
growth, progress and com·
mun.ity services of libe
chapter will be M r s •
Hackmeister. with M r s •
Stanley Cochran, president,
making the presentation.
For her many hours of
service to S<>rority projects
Mrs. Cochran will b e
honored with her serond
Pallas Athene award by
Mrs. Robert Rees. Mrs.
Rees and Mrs. Joseph Cook,
president of the sponsoring
Eta Epsilon chapter, w1l1 be
honored guestJ.
Couple Reveal Plans
For September Wedding
A SePlember wedding in
the Community Ml6odi.rt
Churob of Huntington Beach
la being planned by Catole
Jeanne Sprague and Larry
Francis Griffith of Seal
Bea.ch.
Miss Sprague, daughter ot
Mr. aod Mrs. Willard LeRoy
Spl'ague ol B u n t i n g t o n
Harb<p, was graduated
from San Marino High
Sdlool and received her BA
de~ et CalifonU State
CA>llege at· Loog Bead!.
Her fiance, eon of Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Clark of
Ogden, Ut.Ml, a t te n d e d
Weber State College in
Ogden aod has served three
yea:rs wWl the U.S. Army.
CAROLE SPRAGUE
Troth Told
~EAT----
24 HOUIS A DAY AND STILL LOSI Wll•HT ...... ,.., ............ ..., ..... .........
Weight Watchers'· ......, .... ~
, .. ,. •• '"" ........ , ...... le,....t ................ .
welfM _....... ••--•ti .. la ... werN.
NeCHtrachtealpl
NO FAD DllTS NO CRASH DIETS
NO IXUCISIN6 NO MACHINIS
NO MIDICATION NO STARVATION • Friends Meet
P'riendl of the Newport
ltbcb Library ... baVfnl •
"• Ila ~ April 25, in ........ ~ at the
On the s e c o n d Wed·
netdays ~ each month
members o f Pacetetter
Chapter, Children's Althma .:
Research IMtttutie I D d I
Hoepital ~ Summoned to S
meeting• • I p.m. Mn. ~ Dooald Perkal, M2-0980,
NOW lCCmtM• NIW MIM•lS
MONDAYS. 71tt PM.
c .... Mea ...... a..
WIDNDDAYI,
12111 P.M. , .......... ,.., .......
, ........... Mall
Bluffs, Ml4 Vllta de) On.
Newport Beach. tunuti ---~. I
I ~ EXClUSIVE ~ ')fl'" • .,, ~# COIFFURE STYLISTS • ~·
_ M • IVIM .... IY AnofNTMlfff ·~~
,...-J7M ...._ ... _C:.. .._ O.t,..
•11 ... 11Ht lm.t Nn,..llwtl w.....,.c ...
Trwttefylh .............. w......_.,. .......
........ st I .. _, .. ••••Ill ........ It •11•= , .. ._ ... J y.
ll611TIAnON 1.00 Mllft'IN• J.OO
MIN • WOMe.. • new.as
Fw Fvr+tt.r lnfonnaffeft C.lh
l&IMI
• 11 ...... "c..._ c... ·-----------------
Work
appear superaelWUw. Don't
demand perfection. Under·
stand that many today re-
quire face-savine device.
You gab> more through
praise than by force. Act ac· cordingly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.. Jan. 19): Obtahl hint frOOl
SOO!,lPIO mes111e. Action
center• ~ home bue.
Dec1sion r~ future
secudt)' fa owrdue. Know
thla -ftDd out what'•
holdlnt k up. Get to the
point -Uk.
AQVARRJS (Jan. 3>-Feb.
18): Accent on relaUou
wid\ nelgbbor1, t h o a e
around you. One who waa a
&tran1er mu.a 1ettin of
friendship -accept. Exhibit
aeoae of humor. Be versatile
without tcattertnc y o u r
forces.
PISCES (Feb. 19-IW'dl
20): Money, person a 1
poeHSaiom are IJ>OWgbted.
You could obtain ~nulne
bargain if oblerva. Kno1'
where thln11 an -don't
milplace valuablet. Impor·
tant individual aaka your
opinion.
lF TODAY 18 YOUR
BmTRDAY, you have great
loyalty to family, nation.
Recent change at home
presents aome apprebenlion
HIAL THtllt l'UTUltl CARYID -Eumtntng an authentic African mut an!
(left ~1) Mr1. Lyle Greenway, Fouatatn Valley, Mrs. Fred Grazer, New-
port , and Dr. Bmlard O'LouJhlin., Huntington Beach, members of tbe Mission Docton Alloclatlon wldch lJ lpon.eoring ita third annual dance in Or-
ange County.
Association Do nces
-but you adJUlt U mature. ·----------;~ ;f *~ Flying Doctors Benefit
DENCIES: Cycle high for
ARIES, TAURUS. Special
word to LIBRA: be sure
that a me11age or can la
clearly transmitted.
..T~o~. "::,,.~= ~":':-', •;:
:!r.0109~~ lJ'• ~.rut, ~'Tf: 80Cllclef, n.. O•llY Piiot, lox n«I,
?~1r. Cenlr•I Statloft, New Yo.11, N. Y.
Off to Hawaii
With plans toarlng as bigb
as tbe flying doctors ln
Southern Rbodeeia who will
benefit, members of ttie
Misisjon Doctors A.wociation
are completing f i n a I
preparations for a dinner
dance Friday, April 26, ·in
the Santa Ana Country Club
Serving as general
chairman for the third an·
nual fund-raising event in
Orange Oou.aty are Dr. and
Mrs. 1\lomaa Clute, Santa
Alla, assisted by Drs. and
Mmes. Richard Hayden,
Tustin; Joseph Lynch, San~
Ana ; Russell Langeobeck.
Tustin. and Fred Grazer,
Newport Beadl, who will
welcome members a n d
guests.
Party Honors Cooneys
. The aseooiation w a s
founded in Los Angeles in
1951 to encourage and sup.
port Catholic m e d i c a 1
missions in Africa and Latin
America. It la compriaed of
approximately 70 laymen,
doctors, den ti st s and
paramedical personnel, and
more than ~ members who
contri bu te funds,
t r ansportation. insurance
and operating expenses for
physicians and th e i r
families who wlunteer their
services for three years in
this field.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo T.
Cooney of Balboa Island
celebrated their golden wed·
ding anniversary Easter
Sunday.
They began the day with
High Mass followed by
brunch at the Newpocter Inn.
They ended the day with a
dinner party in Greenbrier
Itm in Garden Grove.
Among guest.e at the party
were their children and their
spouses. Richartt Cooney of
Los Angeles and t h e
Messrs. and Mmes. Robert
McCabe of Costa Mesa,
James Pendleton of Mon-
trose, and R<>bert Cooney of
Studio City.
Grandchildren attending
were Bryan McCabe, Mrs..
Suzanne McCabe Comer.
who Oew in from Tucson,
Jenoy, Tony, Carla and
Caren P e n d I e t o n and
Terence and Helen Cooney.
Miss Agnes Cooney of Los
Angeles, the h o n o r e e ' 1
sister, also was a guest.
Dr. Herb e T' t Soreo6on,
reeently returned from the
miBsioo at Li.Jwnj, M~
will be the featured speaker
at the dinner. The Orange
County Rhyttim Doctors will
play for daneing.
The doctors on duty in
Dreifontein, S o u t h e r n
Rhodesia. recently w e r e
supplied with a small plamt
to visit other stations in
outlying areas.
A.s:sifting with Ule damce,
which will draw many
friendl Of the m e d i e a 1
miteloos in addM10cl to
pb}'9iciana end de~. are
Drs. and Mmea. James T.
Nolan, Santa Ana, reserva·
tions; 0. B. Q uh j en o.
decorations. and John L.
Mc Andrews, Lee Metcalf
and Bernard O'lA>ugblln,
publicity. Mn. Cooney was born in
Newton, Kan. and he bus·
band wai bonrin San Pedro .
They met in Los Angeles in
1911 aod were married in
1918. 'Ibey lived in Los
Aneetee far 4.1 years and
8lf)eUl the last 1eveo years
on Balboa Island. Cooney
was a credit manager for 42
~al'S before his retirement.
GOLDEN WEDDING FETED
Mr. end Mrs. L• T. COOMy
Use Powder
To Stop Slips
From Clinging
The couple will fly to the
Hawaiian lslan<U w h e r e
they will spend several--------To prevent a nykJD alip
korn clinging to • .ntorm
or lbeer dreea. dult bodl
g~ will talcum
powder.
weeks.
Empreee Party Set
7" silverplated dish with
matchiog Empress spoon for
mints, nuta, relithet. •s• ...,........... . ....
IN"r'SMATIONAL.
DEEPSILVE~
4-TM• INT1UUfATIONAL en.Wtit COMPMIW
• •
§~K'S te FaahlOft f1leltd
• NEW'°"T ctNTtk
--.., 644-1 uo
Kids Like to
'Ask Andy'
Tune In_ the
Colorful
Sound or
Orange
County
Must.c!
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
From Fashion Island.
Newport Beach
..... , Readership: You Spel I it A·n-n L-a-n.d+r-s
I
( 1 J • .
--...... -"
DAILY PILOT J l)
April u ·nveils Season o.f Rings and Rice .
Lynda Murphy Marries •
In Church of Nativity
T.P. Cox Claims Bride
In Whitti·e'r Ceremonie t
Honey mooo.ini at Lake
Ta.hoe before makiq their
first home in Buntinaton
Be.ch are YJcheel H .
McNerney and his bride, the
former Lynda Murphy.
El Monte's C a t b o l l c
Cburcb of tbe NltivitJ WU
tbt settinJ fer tbe Saturday
alterDooD double r i n g
c.em()lly. Two l a r g e
baskets ol .tllte gladioli and
chrysanthemums .adorned
the dar.
~ txide. daugbttt Of the
Gerald 4 Murphy1 o f
Newport Bead\, wore an A·
line eown oe textured ot-
Tvrvlll1 SIM!e
MRS. MICHAEL McNERNEY
tffwport Bride
Leucadia Home
toman with a s q u a r e
neckline, short 1leeve1 a.od a
obape1 Jeogtb wltteau panel
train. Her cathedral length
veiling wu outlined in ap-
pUq ues ol imported lace.
The former Miss Murphy
urrled a cascading bouquet
of lily of the valley and
stepMnotis centered with a
white orchid corsage.
Miss Conni Mufl'by, the
bride's sister, was ma.id of
honor. She was gowned in a
moss green crepe A·llne
dress with a long train.
Clusters of lily of the valley
~rved as her headpiece and
caught a tiered veil. She
carried a nosegay of white
carnations and o r a n g e
garnet roses.
Dressed Identically i n
dresses of daffodil yellow
and holding yellow carna·
t.ions and orange roses were
the W.isses Sally Sarver of
Newport Beach; Sally Mer·
rill, P«tland; Karyn Miller,
Eugene, and D e b b i e
Petersen, Ar C"I d i a,
bridesmaids.
Assisting as flower girl
and ring bearer were Karen
and Kevin Toshima o f
Alhambra.
The benedict. son or Mrs.
Eileen McNerney of El Mon·
te and the late M r .
McNemey, asked G illrert
Fuentes of El Monte to be
best man. Ushering were
Ernie Varela, Ken Clayton.
Charles Poise and Bill
Boyce.
California Country Club in
Whittier was the setting for
the reception. Miss Paula
Ausband of Chula Vista
circulatl!d the guest book
among U!e 250 guests.
The bride Is a graduate of
San Gabriel High School and
her husband received his
education at Arroyo High
MRS. F. HUGH GRINNELL
Hawaiian Honeymoon
Irvine Home Selected
•
By NeWfywed Grinnells
Following a Carmel and
Monterey honeymoon, new·
lywed Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Philip Cox will reside in
Vallejo where the bride·
groom is stationed with the
U.S. Navy.
The former Suellen Chap·
man, daughter or Mrs.
William M .. Chapman of La
Habra and the late Mr.
Chapman became Mrs. Cox
during a double ring cere·
mony performed by the
Rev. Dr. Ricl)ard Sneed in
First Methodist Church or
Whittier. The bridegroom
Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
George A. Cox of Newport
Beach.
Given in marriage by her
cousin. William J . Crawford
of Dallas. the bride wore a
rose point lace gown with
sabrina neckline and a
chapel train. Lace trimmed
the bodice, sleeves and the
hemline of her bourrant
skirt. A crystal tiara caught
her illusion veil. and she
carried pink roses surround·
ed with white roses and
stephanotis on a white pray· er book.
Wearing pink frocks and
matching picture hats and
carrymg cascades or pink
roses and carnations were
her entourage.
Attending as maid of hon·
or was Miss Pamela Lang·
ley. Whittier. while brides· maids w er e the Misses
Terry Crews. La Habra,
Katherine Thaxton. Whit·
tier and Candace Cox. sis·
ter or the bridegroom.
Attending as best man
was Gregg Williamson of
Provo, utah. and usherin,I!
J,:!uests to their seats were
Croy Davis, Santa Rosa.
John Smith, Fullerton and
Jerry Brown, Newport
Beach.
Circulating the g u e s t
book during the reception in
the church was Miss Nancy
Pace-Crowley Vows Said
St. Cecelia's C a th o 1 1 c
Church, Tustin was the set·
ting for the single ring rites
bnking M rs . Jacqueline
Marian Blakesley of rrv1ne
and F. Hugh GriMell of
Newport Beach.
The Rev. Anthony Duvall
performed the rites for the
daughter of Mr. an<I Mn.
.John M. Makely or Costa
Mesa and tile son or Mr. anrf
Mrs. Francis A. Grinnell of
Pinetop. Ariz.
\.\caring pink crepe gowns
with lace tnm and carrying
white and pink carnation~
wrre Miss Tina Ta rantino o[
ln•ine. maid or honor; Mrs.
Ronald Purdom of Costa
~ll'~a. the bride's sister and
Miss Gretchen Johnston.
also of Costa Mesa. her
niece. who were th e
brides maids. Mary Shannon Crowley of
Balboa Island became the
bride of Marine C a p t .
Simone John Pace in a
single ring ceremony in the
presence of 150 relatives
and friends.
The Rev. R i c h a r d
Waterfall of Sa11 Bemardino
performed the ceremony in
Our Lady Queen of Angels
Church in Corona del Mar.
The bride Is the daughter
of Dr. and Mrs. Francis L.
Crowley of San Bernardino
and Baiboa Island. Parents
MRS. SIMONE PACE
Acapulco Honeymoon
Betrothal
Announced
The engagement of Naomi
Sherman and R 1 c h a ~ d
Wallace has been announced
b) her parent., Mr. and
Mrs. AM• D. Sherman of
Hunttnctoa Bncb.
The cpaplt pm to be
married at S p.m. Sat\a'day,
June 16, in the Flnt
ConcrefatloHl C h u r c h,
Buena Psrtr.
MIA Sbmnan w t I l
graduat. from Marina Hlth
School in June. Her fiance, a
gradUate of Fullerton'• S1m-
ny RilJt Hieb Scbeol, I• dM
son of Mn. Emmett Conn of
FuUtttoa.
NAOMI SHIRMAN .luM ., ....
or the bridegroom are Mr.
and Mrs. John Pace of
Teaneck, N. J.
Given Jn marriage by her
father, the bride selected a
chaMilly lace over taffeta
gown witn Jong catbedral
train trimmed with lace.
Her vell was shouldef length
and was caught to p&tals of
lace trimmed in pearls. She
carried a bouquet of orchids
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a
white gown "'ith 1 a c e
overlays. Her floor length
skirt extended into a train.
and he'r rnusion veil '#as
caught to a floral headpiece.
Stephanotis and o r c h i d ~
formed her bouquet.
and ~anoas. ,---
Miu Patricia I r e n e _.........-:
Crowley, the bride's sister, _..-;;Jtt'~,J
was maid or honor.
Bridesmaids were Miss Kit
Donnellan. Mrs. G e n e
Kelley and Mrs. C e c i 1
Temus, the bride's cousin.
Attend31'1ts were gowned
in long white crepe dresses
with organdy bell sleeves.
They wore short white veils
held by velvet bows and car·
ried cascades of white
carna tions.
Best man was C a p t .
Patrick Mjtchell. Ushers
were Capt. Euge n e
Packwood, Capt. Er I k
• Cederblom. and Capt. Larry
Murphy, all Marine Corps
friends of the bri~groom. '"''"11 ~ .....
Ring bearer was Ralph Tel· MARILYNN STEVENS
nus. To Marry
A reception took p 1 a c e
In the Sheraton-Beach Inn in
Hunt.ington Beach after the
ceremony. The tbree·tiered
cate wu cut with the
brldesroom' • sword.
Special gUMla Included
the bridegroom's parents
and young brother. 'Thomas ;
his ~ and her husband.
Mr. and Mrs. R ob e rt
McAfee of Georgi11 ; 'his
~andmother. Mrs. Angela
P a c e of New Y o r k ; the
bride's aunt. Miss Marie
Ctowley of San Francisco.
and a frfend. Miss Muriel
Phillips of San Francisco.
The bride is a graduate of
St. Bernadine High School in
San Bernardino, received a
BS In nursing from San
Diego State C •lege and ob-
ta.lned an e l m e n t a r y
leachlng credential from the
University ofi S o u t h e r n
Calllomla.
Her husband Is a graduate
of the U. S. Naval Academy
at Annapolis, Md. and Is
prewnUy attendln1 S a n
Diego Slate IJ"lldhtt School
of Buslnesa. Alta •ervtn~ a year In Vietnam, he Is 1ta·
tloned with the U. S. Marine
Corps at Camp PtndJeton.
After a haneyJDO()(I in
Acapulco , the newlywed&
will Uve In Leuc~dil.
,
Betrothal
Celebrated
At Party
A family luncheon aho;ird
the Reuben E. I. t' e
ce lebrated the eni?acrmrnl
of Marilynn Lanct' SIM ens
and Sgt Stephen C Prrry.
Patents ol the betrothrd
couple are Mrs. E !..
Waterman or llur.tincton
Beach and the Geori:r Prr·
ry1, also or Hunt1 •1M n
Buch.
Mist S t e v e n s atlcnclcd
Huntincton Beach schools.
w11 graduated from Ve n·
tura HJgb School and al-
t e n d e d San Bernardino
Valley eon.se.
Her {lance is an alumnus
of John Basco High School.
South San Gabriel. attended
Fvlltrton Jul'llor Collc~c and
wu sraduated from Or11nge
Coast College. Currenll\' hf'
ll ltl'Vinl with the Gree n
Beretl ln ~letnam
No elite hu been sel for
the weddine.
/\ttrndrng Uie bridegroom
as best man was his
brother .. J. Richard Grinnell
or Tucson. while another
brother. Allan J. Grinnell of
Dallas and Nelson Rice of
Newport Beach w e r e
ushers.
Soloist was Mr1:. GrinnPll,
a member or the Dallas
Civic Opera.
Afterward 100 iues ts of·
fered toasts at a champagne
reception 1n the Newporter
Inn. Ass1sllni? were Miss
Christine Grinnell. t h e
brldegroom·s niece who cir·
culated lhe ,euesl book. The
bridegroom·s nephews, Kev·
in Grinnell and Thomas
Holmes were altar boys at
the nuptial mass.
Follow1ng a H a w a i i a n
honeymoon. the bridal cou·
pie wtll reside 1Jl lrvine.
The bride 1s a graduate of
Mater Dei High School and
attended Mount St. Mary's •
College. Her h u s b a n d
received hls bachelors and
masters degrees from the
University of Arizona where
he affiliaited with Alpha Tau
Omega .
..
J1mw1y P'lloto
MRS. PRICE
CdM Home
Parents Reveal
MRS. RICHARD D. ttllSAU
Candftllfht Semee
MRS. THOMAS P. COX
V1llejo Home
Tye of Whittier. Special
guests were Mrs. Grace
Means or Shreveport. La.,
the bride's grandmother:
Mrs. Ruby Overton and Mr.
and Mrs. Crawford . DaUas:
Mrs. Florence Saner of
South Pasadena. the bride· groom's grandmother, and
Mr. and Mrs. Davis.
The bride is a graduate o{
California High Sc h o o 1,
Whittier and attended Mount
San Antonio College, Wal· nut. H e r husband is a
graduate of the Army and
Navy Academy, Carlsbad
and attended California Lu·
theran College, Thousand
Oaks.
Nancy Jo Moore Now
Mrs . David G. Price
Home in Corona del Mar
are David Gordon Price and
his bride. the former Nancy
Jo Moore, both Harbor Area
residents, who were mar·
ried in double ring rites
performed by the Rev. Dr.
William R. Eller in the
Lutheran Church of l1he
Master.
The bride. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter E. Moore
of Monrovia. was given in
marriage by her father and
she wore an A-Line cage of
imported Alencon lace over
peau de soie. A crown of
stephanotis caught her ii·
lusion veil. and she carried
white orchids and
stephaootis on a white Bible
that she carried during in·
stallation as honored queen
of Job's Daughters.
Pink J(Owns and bouquets
of pink daisies were selected
for Mrs. N. Rex AwaJt, the
hride's sister and matron of
honor: Miss Bever I y
Adams, and the Mm<'s.
Donald Tredway, AnUlony
Leach. Luis Edmund Smith
and Merrill Worthington Lee
Jr .. attendants. Stacy Leach
was flower girl, and Reic
Awalt, the bride's nephew
was the ring bearer.
The bridegroom, son of
Mrs. Gordon Price of Whit·
Her and the late Mr. Price,
asked Tredway to be his
best man. while ushers were
Smilti. Robert H e r r on,
James Flores. Ned Loom.is
and Robert Hughes.
The bride, a teacher in
Garden Grove. is a gradu ate
of Temple City High School
and Redlands University
where she affiliated w i t h
Alpha Theta Phi. Sbe is
working t o w a r d s her
masters at California State
College at Long Beach.
Her husband. a Corona del
Mar High School teacher. 1s
an alumnus of Whittier High
School. received his AA
from Fullerton Junior Col·
lege and his BA and
masters from CSCLB. He is
a member of Sigma Pi.
Newport Rites
A candlelight service in
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church was the setting for
the double ring ceremony
linking in m a r r i a g e
Rosemary Palmer a n d
Richard D. Riesau of Hun·
tinRfon Beach.
The Rev. Dr. Raymond I.
Brahams oWciated at the
nuptials for the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George A.
Palmer of Costa Mesa and
the son of Mrs. Rob<>rt
McDonald of Pasadena and
.Jack Riesau of San Gabriel.
The bride wore a spun
organdy l{OVt'n with em·
bcllished flowers. Her full
length illusion veil nowed
from a petal headpiece and
!!he held a cascade of lilacs,
roses and orchJds sur·
rounding a Blbll
MlH Judy Marie Ross of
Newport Beach was maid of
ho n o r . Serving as
!:lrideamaJds were M i s s
Dlane Palmer of Costa
Mesa, cousin ot the bride.
Miss Denise Riesau of
Pasadena, the bridegroom's
sister and Miss Vick.le Brad·
field of Costa Mesa.
They wore cherry pink
JOWN with white lace tnm
ming. The honor attendant
carried a cascade of pink
lilacs and roses while the
bridesmajds held lavender
lilacs and pussy willow1.
Junior bridesmaids were
the Misses PatU and Denise
Palmer. the bride's cousins.
Miss Kimberly Grey was
flower girl and J a m e 1
Kermode was ring bearer,
while Perry Palmer and
Brad Riesau, cousins of the
newlyweds, attended a 1
acolytes.
Best man was Jamet
Faulkner of P a s a d t n a •
Ushers seating tbe guests
were Charles C. Palmer,
brother or the bride, David
E I c h l e r and Hugh Mc·
Culloch.
The reception rollowed In
the church hall. Miss Nancy
Kreutz circulated lhe guest
book. Among special guests
attending was Mrs. Wllliam
Kanr of Ft. Lauderdale,
granwnotber of the bride.
The new Mrs. Rleaau ts 1
~aduate of Newport Har~r
Hi~h School and her h$·
band was a student at Sen
Gabriel High School 8Jld
Orange Coast College. Now
he Is a science major at
California State Collere at
Long Beach.
The couple will make thltr
home ln Huntinftoo Bu~
----~------------_...._ _______ ----..-...-........ ..-......-. ... ~ ............... ____ ,__
IC DAILY PILOT
-Newport Harbor Panhellenic Award
.Mrs. Bernard Wins Athena
RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICI! -Mrs. Leon Fry, incoming president of New-
~ port Harbor Panhellenic (right) bands Mrs. Robert B. Bernard a gift-wrap-
: peel package enclosing the Athena Award. ThJa annual honor is presented to
: an area woman for her outstanding contributions to the community.
., .Newport Wedding
Newlyweds at Home
Making their first home in
Newport Bdch following a
honeymoon in San Francisco
are Jell Pence and h.is
. bride, the former Sharon
• Arlene Woods.
The Rev. Dr. Charles
.. Dierenfield officiated at tbe
• double ring nuptial.I in St.
·A n d r e w ' a Presbyterian
. Cbtadl.
' P~ of the Balboa
' Island couple are Mr. and
The bride wore a white
crepe floor length gown
featuring a lace y o k e
bordered with tiny pearla.
Falling from the yoke was a
train trimmed in lace and
pe.arla and her three-tiered
veiling was caught to a
purl crown.
She carried a bouquet of
Wih.i1e r09eS centered by
ordllds and babye breath.
A woman wbo found time
to help otben IBd dldl't expect reeopltkla ll sucb a
woman that memben ol
NewPOrl Harbor Panbellen-
lc feted with tbll year's
Athena Award.
Receiving tbe hcnor bl
the Balboa Yacht Club wu
Mrs. Robert 8. Benard.
Her lilt ol actiritiet n111
like a Who's WM iD tbe
Harbor AreL She ewrtatty
is president ol lbrber Am·
illary of Swtb Cout Cblld Guld.anoe Cllnlc and la oo
the board ol directors.
'lbe Balboa bland Nii·
dent bu been CHl'd.lnator
of t h e YMCA/Fairview
St.ate Hospital aummer pro-
gram for fom" yean, ii a
Trl·IU· Y program consult-
ant and for seven years wu
a member ol the bolrd ol
dJrectora for the Metropol·
it.an Lot Anctlel YMCA.
Mn. Bernard .... chair-
ed for the aru March ot
Dimes, American Caneer
Soclety, Golf ClUlic, Heart
Fund and WU • found1.ng
member of Children's Home
Society in the South Bay.
She was a Cub Scout den
mother. Girl Scout advtaor
and bas been afflll.ated with
four PTA unita.
The Univentty ol South·
ern California alumna and
recipient of a Phi Beta
Kappa key holdl member-
ships in the Friends ol the
Ubrary, American B o I t
Program, Town and Gown
and the World .Affatn Coun-
cil of Orange Count:J.
Helyn ii a deacon ol St.
A n d r e w'1 Presbyterian
Church and for 11/eara has
been on the boar ol wom-
en's fellowship and was
president for two years.
Many ti.mee she bu be-
come active in organb.atlons
due to the interest of be.r
children.
The mother of lS.year-old
twins, Bryn and Bret, and
14-year-old, Brooke, claims
she always has had the sup-
• port and enthualasm of her
husband and cblldren in au
of her endeavors.
Tips Given
Gardeners
c osf a Mesa Lutheran Cerem0!1Y
Pa ir Feted Nuptial Vows Recited
In 11/inois
· Forty yean .ot maniq9
were celebrated bf Mr· and
Mrs. VenlOD Jobuoo of
Costa Maa llt a reception
ed open boUle in Flora, Ill.
The party also eelebrated
tbe 50tb u.niwrMry ol
J ohnaon'a allta' and b•
buaband Mt. ud Mr1. W. F.
Stewart ol Moi.mtain grove,
Ill.
The JchmoDa have two
500S. Bill and J a m e 1
Johnson, and two sranclloaJ.
Charles and Jamet JobnlOll,
all ol Costa Men. The
Stetrart.I' ooe IOD, Vernon,
ho8t.ed tbe reception in bil
home.
'lbe Hnint table featured
Ill STIDfemelft of IOJd
chrysanthemums and a
cake decora(ed wttb yellow
roses, lerved by Mr 1.
Freida Reaves. Miu Mary
McCarty preaided at the
punch bowl. The boaoreet
were served by Sherry and
John Zimmerman.
Off ice rs Na med
By Associates
Eutbluff Pbllhannonic
Aaaodatel o1 <>ranee eouo-
ty ~monic SocWy will
name new ottlcen tomor-
row when they meet in the
home ol Mrt. Jack R.
Curley .
Following will be a pro-
gram of modern folk muale
by the Fifth Street Taxi, a
group of flve seniors from
Corona del Mar High School
A satad luncheon will con·
elude the session.
Mt. Md Mn. E.. w.
klnllM ol CW.. Cl&J' •·
nomced tbt mll'JUte ot ber
d.lutbter. Barblra Amt
Loot and Harold Jamel
Radeke ot N9WJMll1 Be.ela.
'Ibe Rev. L. V. ,...__
IOlemaiJed the ceretnOa1 in on.t LutblraD Cludl ol Coda ...... p ... ol tbe
tit.diet are llr. IDd Mn.
W. C. RadeU ol DavtapOl't.
loin.
l"or ber do9bl• r l n I
CWIDlCIDJ the !ride delip.
ed md ID8de a flem 1enCtb
iown ot .,..a de .-wttb a
cbape1 train and n-em-
broidend Alnaa I a c e
...... Qo)'ttal beads and
Mtd pe.-11 outlined tbe lace
l&'Pliq\191 OD the .Jlltwl,
neckllne and tram. A
lboulder --l1lUlioa wU aad a Vidarian ltyll bou-
quet of m......... wtlJlt9
l'OMI and lily ol .. ...-
compWed her euemble.
Mn. Lerty Le8aron ,..,
a1ted by her ... to be
matron of honor. She w«e a
laveodar empire Door leotUI
1own of lace and pique with
a matchioc beaddrets ol
tailored double bows.
•
MRS. HAROLD RADEKE
Newport leach Home
Dressed identically were
bridesmaids, Miu ~
~aft? and Mn. IW'vin
Gosmnan. All abndaoU carried noeegl'YI of violete, de&r'et l n aeronautical After a weddinC trip to __.. and .tfillated Carmel, Moat«eJ and Napa
carMtioal and b a b Y ' wiell ~ Sltma fnUrnl· Velley Che couple wBl live iJa br=. man w• Kenneth L..t,=t:J=·=========N=w=pot=t=Beedl.===== Dufour. Usben ,,., Ernest
K. Mann Ill encl Rtet.d D.
Beebe. 'lbe church WU
decor*l With bMketl of
whit.e flowers on each side
of the altar and wtlte satin
bows on the pews.
A reception for 100 people
was given in the Costa Mesa
Golf and Country Club
where champagne, wedding
cake and hors de'oeuvres
were served.
Special gue.t.a were ttie
bridegroom'• parenta and
sisters, Miss B a r b a r a
Radeke and Mn. J . H.
Campbell o f Daveoport,
Iowa, aod Miu J u d y
Radeke of Hawaii.
IF YOU ARE A NEWCOMER TO TOWN
OR KNOW ONE TO WHOM YOU WISH
TO DO A GOOD TURN •••
,..ONE THIS WONDUFUL COMMUNITY
SEltVJCE AND A HOSTlSS WILL CAU
WITH (l;IFTS AND INFORMATION.
Dottie Walters
Hospitality
Hostess Q). A
We Welcome You
To The
ORANGE COAST AREA
PHONI 544-6925 Mn. Eldro Woods of
Monrovia llDd Mr. and Mrs.
John Pence ol Ft. Thomas,
··~.
Selected to aerve as at·
tendants were Mrs. Gary
Tuttle of Spokane, matron of
honor; Miss Ja.ni.oe Hopkina
of San Fraodaco. IDd }{..lsa
Leslie Cap,eloto of Newport
Newport Bethel
Young women affiliated
wi.tb Newport Beach Job'a
Daughters, Bethel 1 5 7
gather the second a n d
fourth Mondays at 7:30 p.m.
The Masonic Temple is the
setting for the meetings. In·
formation r e g a r d i n g
membership may be ob-
tained by calling M r s .
Walter Tuz, 545-175.S.
The bride is a graduate of
Venice High School and her
huabaod is a graduate of
Iowa State Univenity where
be received a bachelors
Here are a few tips forlfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iimii~~~-iiii~mmiiiimmii~
plant lovers who want to see
theh cut flowers brleht and
alive for longer pqlod1.
OCSociety
Goes South
. .An M'IDdlalr tour ol South
-.America will be taken by
•. Orange ~ ~a)og.ioal
Society, wMll me m be r s
'"meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
April 25, in B o w e r s
Museum, Santa Ana.
· The slide program will be
:. jjresented by C. J . Marks,
• who wsis honored .wittl a trip
to the continent when he
retired three years ago.
A native of Kansas, Marks
w.as a resident of Arizona
before coming to Orange
"County and spending 31
years as secretary-manager
ol the Ora.nee County Farm
'"'Sureau.
• .He now I! on the board of
... 'tt\e fair. Services for the :~ BUnd, Project 21. consultant
·•to the Orange Co"?ty Cham·
· ber of Commerce and is a
• itistrid officer ol the Lions
• Oh.ab. . . , . ..
· TOPS Mermaids
I n f ormation . regarding
~ memberlhip In TOPS Merg-
• ·ing Mermaids m~ b e
, received by telephoning
.. Mn. Jobn Komff at 648-
• 6213 or Mrt. Le o n
· 1 ow n a e n d , 8 4 8-1804 .
. ~ ~ take place at 7
~.hi. every Thursday 1n . w ood.1and School, 2 0 2 5
• Tustin Aw .. c.oeta Mesa.
· lD'S IE FllBIDLY
tf foa have Diw ~
ot now ol &01one IDO'riJlt
te oar ar•, ple ... t.eD u
10 that Wt IDq eztl!IDd I
friendly wdcome and bell>
tbem to btcOlne acquatnted ·
•la their new aunoundlnt•• I
1111111 ..... ludl
¥Isler
Beach.
They donned loot aqua
nylon dresSi!s and net head-
pl~s. White roses a n d
babys breath made up their
bouquets. P'~tAI~
Recut at.ems, preferably
under wit.er, and allow
flowers to become plump
and crisp by standing in
water in a cool. draft-free j
location for several hours
before using in an ar-I rangement Using warm
Dan Ross of San Fran·
cisco was best man while
assuming usher duties were
James Lee of Ft. Thomas;
Ronald Huguenard, F t .
Wayne, Ind.; Gerald Leland
and Ted Hirth, both ol
Newport Beach.
Soloist was the bride's
cousin, Kenneth Williams.
Following the e v e n l n g
ceremony 250 guest• were
received io the church by
the newlyweds. Circulating
the bridal book during tbe
reception was Mra. Hirth.
Special gueAI attending
ftre Mrs. Samuel Postel,
~ bride's gr.mmotber;
Mrs. Cyrua Wood1; Mr. and
Mrs. P. M. Opper of
Cleveland; Mr. and f{..rs.
Vlrgil Applegate, Denver;
Mrs. William Cook.Un, Fl
Thomas. and Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Holbo, Sacramento.
The new Mrs. Pence is an
alumna of W h i t w o r t h
Dl!818Nl!D
~SP~CIALLY '0"
WPt..11
c t mutd .. ,.. .... ,.... .. •>• ... ...........
MRS. J EFF P ENCE
New Bride
College and her husband is a
graduate of the University
of Kentucky where be pledg·
ed Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
water -as hot as the hand I
can stand -In the container
will speed th.e conditioning
process. I
Conditioning containers
and vuea abould be clean to
minimize bacterial a n d
fungus growth that can plug
the cut stems. I
If a Oower preservative is ;
used in the vase water to in-
hibit bacterial growth it will
not be nece11ary to recut
stems daily to prevent stem
plugging.
Auxili«!ry ..
Coastline Auxiliary to
Veterans of Foreign Wars,
Post 3536 gather the fir~t
and third FrMiays at 8 p.m.
Costa Mesa's A mer i c a n
Legion Hall is the scene of
the meetings .
A BIRTHSTONE
FOR EACH CHILD
N $1t.tlll 1C...,
Cornelia, mother of 1ncitnt
Rome, dacribed bu most
•.•lu1ble worldly pouei.
••~na bf pointin1 to her
chndren and 11yln1, "These
are my jewels." We prc--
Hnt cbia modern day
aymbol • • • a 1nother'1
birthe.lone rin1. leautifully
fuhioncd io el.pnt atyle
with hand-4atund Floren.
tina hilll. eadl rlftl baa
l)'Dtbedc or ltMrine birth-
._. -Oil • cirdet ol J4Kps.
~ -'IWO Wo\T lfOlll TO -TOU1 W90ll '"°""" ClttlfTlla M~lllTW.T ... ctllfTH .... _...... .. .......... ..
COSTA MaM • ...... MutfT ... "'9 auc-. . ..... w•• -. ,,..._ .... TtL • ~-M.
.. _
I
l ,
~hen are you going to Reduce?
YESTE .RDA Y ?
IT'S SUMMER .SHAPE U~ TIME AT HOLIDAY HWTH SPA
Ul TaA MODlllN CONDITION
ARIAS Cemplete Sv ...........
\ LAST
DAY
INROLL NOW
210..1
HOLIDAY
HEAI·TH BPI l •
.. . . .. . . -~ ....... ·-~-------.-... ...... ---....-. ..... _... -----..-.......-,..._..._;..,. -- -----......_ __ .__ ...... -·--...........
' ,. -.... -. . • .. . ...
T~. April 2J, 1'68
LBGAL NO'l10B LEG41· NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL "lOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL N01'Jl'€
'
DAILY ,llOT J7
Parental
Role Now
To States
...._
' .
By BARBY SCBWEID
WASHINGTON (AP)
Just lut May the Sup'eme
Court made chopme.at of the l~a that Juvenile oowt
Judges are a sort o f
substitute parent, eot.iUed to
punlBh or condone 11 thty
lee fit.
Juvemles accused of
crime, the court eaftl, are
entitled to be judged by the
1ame coostitlltiona.l ground.
rules u adult.a are.
"Neither the Bin of RlgM.t
nor 1he U.S. Coll6'titutioo i6
for adult• only," Justice Abe
Fort.a said then,
On Monday, bowever, Ile
court turned around and
assigned a parental role to
the states in decldi.og wtut
Juveniles may read er -..,
The 6-3 decision, ~
by Justice William J. Bren·
nan Jr., amooiXc to a clu.r
victory for the censors and
an utter rout tor civil
libectarlans. lt pu~ fOVC'D•
ment in tile business of
deciding wbal ia moral .nd
gives government the right
to declare illegal wbJlt it
finds immoral.
Brennan's prOCJ<>UllCemeDt
for the court reaches thll
end by building on the pro-
J>06ition that "the well-beinC
ol ib children iiS of course a
subject within the state's
constitutional power to
regulate."
NEXT STEP
Since s o ci e t y and
''co nstitutional m·
terpretation" have recogni.z.
ed the authority of pareri.11
to direct the rearing ol their
children. the next step WM
d\at parents and teachers
"are entitled to the support or laws" designed to help
them do the job.
All th.is mearu that Mates
have a green light from tile
Supreme Court to tUppress
sales to minon of wtlat.ever
books and magazines a ma
jorlty of the legal~
de e.Ide aN too rich for
young blood. The same pro-
bably holds true for movies
though the decision in a
New York case -wasn't
explicit.
Since the same Supreme
Cow-\ decided \all tenn tbet
''girlie" magazines can't be
kept from adults. the result
Is two sets of rules, or what
is called variab'le obscenity
LEGAL NOTICE
. --
RIACTION -Barry Reasoner, above, reporta on
4fficia1 and private reactions to the report of the
President's Commission on Civil Disorders, tonight
on "What Happened to the Riot Report?" at 9:30
·p.m. on Channel 2..
I
.: TEl,f;"fHilON \'JEWS
I .. 'It's Sock It
-TQ Me Time'
By CYNTHIA LOWRY ,
NEW YORK (AP) -On a recent spring morn-
ing near the comer of Madison Avenue and i4th
Street, passersby were startled to see a small red-
haired girl with a Peter Pan haircut suddenly cry-
ing out: "And now, folks, it's sock it to me time ..
''PEOPLE COME up in the street, even in r es-
taurants," said Judy Carne, looking pleased ... They
can me by name and ask me to say it once just
for them. And, like an idiot, I do it."
There is considerable irony in the emergence
• of Judy Came, late of Northampton, England, as
television's "Sock it to me" girl. Before NBC'•
"Rowan and Martin's laugh-in" caught on, Miss
Came had spent several buay years in Hollywood
witb fat roles in three series. None lasted more
than one season and nothing much happened to
her career.
She bad auditioned for and won the part of ua. EndlJb &irl living with an American family in
"Fair "Zxchange." 'nlls took heT to Hollywood and
Introduced her to lhe American TV audience.
THIS FOLDED, and she moved on-briefly-to
"Baileys of Balboa." Last season she co-starred in
"Love on a Rooftop," but lh1s soon faded.
"I had worked with one of the 'laugh-in' wrilers
in En,land, and I'd done singing and dancing," she
said. 'So I auditioned and was picked. Simple as
that.·•
"SOCK IT TO ME" is, of course, one of those ca\c.b phrases that the public suddenly picks up,
,:itves it a whirl and just as suddenly discards. Even 1-t the show's season ended-it ii now in reruns-
,.J)le writers were trying out a couple of potential
' essors. "Here Comes the Judge" and "Let it
Hang Out," whatever they mean.
-.: ''The Beat of The Brass.'' Herb Alpert's second
· television special on Monday ni~ht was an hour
;\lmost totally filled with the distinctive, attrac-
tive music of bis Tijuana Brass. The show had
trouble malting the visual part of the show as in-
teresting as the music.
THE CIS SHOW, while tuneful enough, lacked
1he sparkle and ingenuity that made the special
lut aeuon IUCb a treat.
Dennb tlte Meta~e
• t •••
JUDGE PARKER
.. . .. .--.-. . . .
Iv Ferd JohftlOll
~I> cqi:tleF, MAN!
NoT Wl1'H >. •LUNT
INSTRUMeNT !
I
OH,ro~v
UMeMeM 1MA1'
"'4.V Fat A LCNG-
Tl Me TO~ •••
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NOW ::'::':'.:'.!:.
PLUS SICOllO PtcTUlte ..,,. ............ ,.,,.,.,... celM
Wllll Jem. Col>urn
N.lTIONAL cocNU•t coit'"Olt•TIOM SHOW nwn
SOUTH 6:10 ,,t.4 . Week4aya F 009\'a _. loa Office 0111eu OX COAST "leRnie & ClyC." 1:47 u ly
...... MIW .... e • • fMe-2711 PNai4e11t'1 Aulyst
7 I'·"'· an4 I 0:40
CONTINUOUS SAT.It SUN. FIOM 1:11
'TB.IPHONI 541-1552 fOI INPOIMAnOM
-1 ·-" ENDS TONIGHT
Did you hear
the one about
The Traveling
Saluslady?
STARTS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24th
AND
PANTASTIC
Stephen Boyd
Special Mat. Wed., 1 p.m. $1.00
FREE REFRESHMENTS SER<VED
Winner 5 AcMfemy
of Aw1rd1
Also "111£ 116, THE BAD & · Tll U6l Y" .... ---••aM. .. --~m
A willful pagionate girl and •••
the three men who want her!
' • ... 1 . ,
I ~ I
I '
• • • J •••• • I -.
'Mai beth' Top Achievement
Of South Coast Repertory
By TO!\t TITUS .................
Above all other plM&dits
ed superlatives wb.ldl must
be paid South c 0 ~ s t
R e p ertory's m*fllUiceDt
production of Shab!9pe ....
"Macbeth." it mult lle,Qlllt8cl
that the Costa Meea eoot·
~ finally h• reiUlld Ma
potential in ita .,, 'n.trd
~Theater.
pathk Lady Marouif.
F.peclal mention must be
given Arthur Koustik for a
hilarious momeot ol much
needed C'Olllic relief as the
· lecherous, drunken porter .
And ·Rooald Bousoom. doing
triple duty, shines vividly in
bis rol-es as the bloodied
captain. the de me tt t e d
murderu and finaDy the
vengefW soldier. ,_,
IHI: INC:llJl:~l ,i
Confined for ov.r two
years in the •t1ay second
Step in Newport Beacla iDCI,
for tbe pa&t seven molllbc
~ in the m• e
The S C R produd.ion,
which today might be term-
ed the ·•straight" version ol
''Macbird." is itiself a strong
indictment of p o I i t i c a l
g r e e d. noting that ·· 'Tis
better to be what we destroy
than by destruct.ion dwell 1n
doubtful joy."
$do
~ISAOl-ot ..... tre_ .......... lMeW.-Ol.MaM
TWO ACADEMY
WINNERS
AUDREY HEPIUlM
l~ST ACTRESS
SW'
"MACSSTM" A lratted'f Ill' WI 111.,,., IM b P lltt • directed Irr O.v14 E..-_, ...,._
W SW.lo O'Cad!L CM~ IW
ltitrlM #MctMI....,., """""' lilr $911-dv Parter, •-led 11'1 Soulll Coat I ._,.,,,,.,. Tilorldays "',,,.,. S-Ya
'"'"I May ff et Ille Thlnl $19 Tl!Mter, 11V ....._, ......... eo.te Ao\eA •
TMa CAST
Macllttll .................. Jedi Dtvls Ledv Madlelll ............ L..,. JoM.
MaoJvff ............ CllinMftt Qevlcllon
Maleolm • .. • • • • • .. • .. • • .i-.....
14...UO .. ........ •• Mal LA!ldOft Jr
D\#IC8ll • • .. • .. • • • .. • Jeff MacNel 1""9t
... • .. .. • • • • .. • DOii T11<lle L-....... MldlMI ~leu U4Y ~ ..... .. . CMrlt Patcll "°"~ . . .......... Arlllur Koustlk Old man ............. ..._"' Parlt Mac<luff't Mil .. . .. • • .. .. .. Jet( I' I rk
Sevlon . .. .. . .. .. .. 1111V Miiier
Cutall\4,..,ard ........ 110!\Ald loll.-n ,.,,..,. .............. Jamtt De Priest
Oonalclti.11\ ............ DeMll La"'bm
Doctw .............. Rolltt1 GI'"
Gtnti.-nan .. . .. . • . SaUlldra Deacon
WltcM. .... ManN McFarlend,
TOlll Oclulllu, IC.Ir., Hau
cavernous Third Step, SCR
now bas a }X'oduction which
fully dulllenges boa1 its
artistic and technical pro-
wess. Both cllallenges M e
met i m p r e s s i v e I y in
"Macbeth."
Director David Emmes
has, with a larger company
and mudl mo~ staging
area, clea.rly outdone his
earlier trium ph of
''Othello," which unit.ii 1-ast
weekend stood as the high.
wat-er mark in SCR pro-
duction. • ' M a c b e t b • •
employs not only top quality
acting but gives free rein to
elaborate staging techniques
impossible at the Newport
theater.
saakespeare's c 1 as s i c
delineation of murderous
ambitklll takes majestic,
and sometimes frighterung,
stature in its persentation at
the Third Step. I t s
cllaracten are superbly in·
BRILLIANT MACBETH
SCR'1 J•ck Davis
murder. His losing struggle
with his conscience in the
"dagger" s e q u e n c e ts
graphically depicted as a
background d r u m b e a t
represents the quickening
beat of his heart .
As the vtUa.ioous Lady
Macbeth. wbo engineers her
husband's murder of his
king, Leslie Jones delivers a
performance of unerring
beauty and intensity. In her
hands, the famed sleepwalk-
ing scene shrieks with guilt-
ridden terror.
Clement Davison portrays
~1acduI£ as a mild-man-
nered warrior who would
rather switch than fight -
until Macbeth's murderous
chain overtakes his wife and
family. His grieving scene
at this news is the most
vividly depicted of the play.
AB the slain k i n g ' s
vengeful son . James Baxes
gives his most powerful
performance: Hal Landon
.Jr. is equally strong as the
betrayed Banquo; Jeff
MacNeilledge lends solid
support as King Duncan:
Don Tuche performs ably in
the role of Macduirs com-
rade Ross. while Chene
Patch contributes an em-
Beyond its superb acting,
''Macbeth's" strength is
underlined by some nerve-
shattering visual effects -
the bloody face of Baoquo's
ghost at Macbeth's feast
and the realism by which ,
the murders perrorm their
m1ss1on. DAIL y I'll.OT Ii.ff ,,....
The final scene. nowever . •we~re Gonna What?'
surpasses all past action Sl"
quences on or off . the Dee Dee Settlemire's plan for "getting even" with
repertory stage. With. ll'On he.r father leaves Paul Toft nearly speechJess in
swords and heavy sh1elds. this scene Crom "Never Too Late." which winds up
MacbeU1 and Macduff du~I a three-week run Wednesday through Saturday
to the d~tb -and Dav~s al the Laguna Playhouse.
wears rune stitches m his ---------------------forehead as a souvenir from
dress rehearsal, which sure-
ly would have rendered a
lesser actor squeamis-h.
The enormity of SCR's
Third Step stage is enhanc·
ed by t~ virtuosity or the
set. a collaboration between
director E m m e s and
designer Sergio O'Cad1z.
Ommously draped in black.
it functions as a backdrop
for innumerable changes o(
scene and mood and is most
efCeotive under the speckled
IJgbts which illuminate U1e
witches' scenes.
"Macbeth" may truly be
I a b e 1 e d South Coast
R e p e r to r y ' s greatest
achievement. The tragedy
continues T h u r s d a y s
through . Sundays at the
Third Step Theater . 1 n
downtown Costa Mesa.
...
It's Stage Career
For Leslie Caron
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD IUPH -
Petite Leslie Caron came to
Hollywood to present an
Oscar al the Academy Award~ and during her stay
explained that she is turning
her tttenlion to the stage.
A magnificent success in
movies -''Gigi." "Lili."
.. American in Paris" -
Leslie's linest performance
was m "The L · S h a p e d
ROOlll."
less about the aucltence and
try to improve her acting
techruques.
Uer reasoo again is can4
did.
·Tm looking Car ahead."
$he went on in her charming
gallic accent. "When I ~
old I want to be a better ac-
tress than I am right. now.
"I am looking forward to
becoming an old lady. You
must begin preparing early
for tilal"
J?a~es ll~'d terpretad, and its climactic • •
scene prese~ts. some of. the So•,iet most electr1fymg a c t 1 o n y
Still. SM \s not content
with movies.
"I would like to do the
unorthodox." she s a 1 d .
"M:iybe join a repertory
company and so some good
plays I don't want to
become the biggest movie
star or ec:irn the mo.st
money
Leslie bas • \oog way to
go. She makes her home in
London now. blendjng an
English accent with her
native French for a
thoroughly enchanting com·
bin at ion.
ever seen on the local stage.
Jack Davis, in the title
role, matches tbt br illiance
ol his "'Othello" with an
out6taoding portr ayai ol the
military leader whose in-
htreot but s u p p r e s s e d
desire for power is ignited
.and goaded Jato ma 1 s
Sexy Imports Draiv Rubles
MOSCOW <UPI) -Sexy.
Her most recent film ts
"!lead of the Family" for
ltal1an director Nannj Loy.
Crossword Puzzle
silly foreign mov;e,s are
errding Soviet morals, a
Moscow newspaper said to-
day.
But there 1s little that can
be done about it. it said.
bf.cause these mov ies draw
bigger crowds !iian the
ideologjca lly soun:.l SJviet
films -and Russian mov1<
f.'{ aters nerd the money.
Sranley Kramer. J e a n
Bagin, Michelangelo .Anh'.>·
r11Cni, Federico 1''e!lini and
!J"On'y Richardson. Fellini';;
"La Dolce Vita" ha~ been
s uown here , but
Richardson's "To;n J~nrs"
I" ;is oot.
"What I really want is lo
become a ~at actress. C
think an actress can develop
better on the stage than she
can in Cilms. But it ~s
on the individual.
"The l~t play I did wa"
· ·Ondine' in London about
six years ago. I liked the
play but I didn't like
the public It depressed me
when they did not respond to
what wH happening on
stage ·•
"It was terribly difficult
at first be<:ause I do not
speak Italian," Leslie con·
cluded. ''Bui it w a s
worthwhile beeause ttle pie·
ture is unorthodox and ex-
citing.''
Leslie. baby. that doesn't
sound like a girl prepadng
to be.come an old lady. AClllOSS 47 Form~
British
l Ful~ grown prlmr S Kin 111lnisttr
or lltUSic 41 Deprives
9 Sprinklt of sanity 14 Rolff 52 Door part
of lht 55 lollusk Auir S7 Can. pikt
15 River p,trch: Dl1I.
to tl!t st 'lr~pt's
Stnr1t Gold mthor
16 Decf1i11 '0 Concemi111: 17 Is not; 2 words
0111. U 'nsagt:
ll A•l1bly Anal.
t!'!tlt U Austrian 1' Rtttplion psycho~
rooll loglst
20 Round •f U Gulf of -du tits '4 "Limp
21 Ltnglh uni~ as • ·":
2l St ll 2 words 24 Kind of glass 65 Lachry111ost
Z6 High rating: &6 Italian c oln z words '7 Ofd .Greek
21 Conducttd lllusical
29 Arduously note
Stvtft )) Ttndon
36 c ........ ,1acr
37 0 .S. tQUI·
nltnt of
53 Down.
" Estt .. t ly dry
)! Bird
40 Ltns
ab rrrallon
41 Angltd:
Suffix
42 Pttlor111ln9
O Gave 0111
~rln,ly 44 , .. ,.
.U Pronoun
DOIN
1 Ulltrs I loud cry 2 Fool
) 1492 ship
4 Caused by
nttU$1ly 5 Fllltd by
crOYdlng
• Covert d ••lh certain vines
7 Electrical
unit a "Thosr -
young
Chlllts"
Ytsteiday's 'unit Solved:
9 Call for 1111,
10 S.t tht
world 11 Abnou1al
chest sOillld
lZ Town In
S. Bucklng-
h1mshlrt 13 Pursur
one's ••Y 22 l1y
2S -Calrdonla 27 Som 29 •• l111k!I
30 ''" rttlfdtd
lllflOft ll Phont
book t11try 32 Otgru
holdtt:
lnfo111al
31 'uddlnt
ln911ditnl
34 Golf club 35 Golf courst
unit 3' Luting thrff yurs
39 Collttllons
of rulu
40 Enterla111n
42 Prrfo11ntd 43 Not wtll
lighltd 45 Vtndor
46 Wtstrrn U S. c~p11al
48 Morr
tn r1bl t
49 Fr.
!)OSUSSIYf SO Gin
ho spilt·
lily
51 Fabtit
52 Ptlty
Quarrtl
SJ l111pe11al
Ordtr of
lht Oa119hl·
t rs of tilt
Empirt Abbr. H "Oal!ln
Yank res"
thilracln
56 C•ucas1~n
lan9u19t S' Noun 1t1rll~
12 ll
The newsp ap er .
S<ivietskava Rossia. com-
p!cined that "ln d'>zen ; oC
foreign movies. we see a
woman in bed, in lht>
ha.throom . on e beach, or
ju$'t plain nude, witno11t any
special reason."
"By releasing b a o a I
foreign Hims oo Sov!tt
.~reens." it said. "we ;;ur-
l ender our positions and, 111-
tlt' by Uttle, lose som<> pclr!
of ttlt moral and spiritual
h cas-ures at' ttils country."
The newspaper said it wa~
n1ot against all irnported
movies.
"Our spmtuaJ w o r I d
\\-OUld be much poorer
"ithout surh movie~ a~ "It'~
a Mad, Mad. MJ<l Mad
World.''
It •iso praised tM work of
The article o :.i i c c t e d
rarticularly lo lW'I IOl'<'iga
fi1ms -"The N a k e d
Virgin." with Ava GarC:ner,
dn<I a French c m1e<iy,
"Operation St. Januarv ..
"Some moY1e pe?p .• <av
Ol'r specta.tors are not \\ e1l
developed in aestiletics," 1t
said. ''This is a dirty lie
about our peoplP ''
The real trouble lies with
money.
A Soviet ideologkal him.
' · Co m m o n Pacism." at-
tracted 118.000 viewers at
479 showings in the clly of
Gorky. it said. wh1le the
/\ "1erk:rn movie. "Some
Like it Hot." p111ll"d in
2 ~: N)() '.lt'rsons at 1,0,17
performances.
· So thl' question is. which
is most important. rubles or
h1on1a11 souls'.'"
The paper did not answer
Nie question.
Leslie. still a pixie. stiJI
beautiful. candidly revealed
some observations generally
kept 9eer81. by performers.
"You develop s.n ex·
traordinary reception on
stage to hear what the au-
dience says You can even
hear 1t breathe. The theater
is an exercise in controllinl?
the audience as much ts 1t
is (X'rforrrung .
"You learn to handle the
aud1enoe likr you do a
thermostat. To stor> them
from coughing you vary
your voice from outburst to
whisper You must tame an
audience lJke a w11d beast ...
Leslie said in her r<'turn
to the singe she will worry
Brazil '66
On Tonight
Melodyland Theater will
inaugurate m spring Se6SOl'l
of ce"le<brity shows ~l
wtth Sergio Mendes and
Brasil '66, Brazilian vocal-
instrumental group. a 11 d
Glen Campbell, country and
w estern singiog-gu1tanst.
plus television comedian
Pi>te Barbutti.
The new show, wh.ict\ wa11
assembled with a view to
pleasing all tastes. will play
ni.l(htly through next Sun·
da). with two shows on
~aturday begiMing at 6::10
and 9:30. and two on Sanday
at 3 aod 8 p.~.
'2001'-What's It About?
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD !AP)
Seldom amce ' ' C i t i z e n
K.mle" ha.1 a major tum
bffn so l~llied a5 ~
work of one man as has
"2001 : A Spa<:e OdySSty ..
To allay any dout>t about
whO h respons.ible. ~
name of Stanley Kubrick aP·
pear9 repc-atedly In the
credits
Kubrick rose f~t in the
fllm world. Al. the result of
bb dl:rectloa ol a qutdie
ert.me fTIOVi• "The Kllllnc.'"
be caogtit dMt attemion of
Kirt DouaJN. JC u b rf c k
dlrected tile Id.or J.n I haUDl·
btJ anUlrcr abb. "Pit.ha ol
Gloo'... IDd I pnttnUOua.
unrealtut epic . "Spartacut •t
The diHcttl' then clipped
lnto bltck c~ Wl1h a
• o m e w n a t c e is aored
"l.otlU" l~Vlt wert.
tllmcd todaf!) ed the •Ud,
wooly "Dr Sl.ra~vt "
Nf'x• Ktlflrk'k \\ll!' JI'. 11
virtual carte blanche by
MCM create the deflnltivl'
space epic. He worked at lii~
own pace. When I visited
England in early 9ummtr o<
1968. Keir Dullea and Garv
Lockwood weore finiwng
their starring role~
Not untn Ulis month was
"2001: A Space Odys~t>y"
premif'red in Ntw York and
Hollywood The repor!Pd
cos.I : 19 mllUon. m<i " than
S2 mllUon over ~get
From • purely tedln11eal
standpoint, Iba expense end
tbe delay sttm wortti it.
Never bavt 1p.act1 Cnrvel end
tbe map~ 0( space
Ilea\ por1rrfed ~ tudl
OGDYlftdnc detlU 11 in tbiJ C~film. But in OU. rttpecl~.
"200!" it 1 1'41ddtnlna rid-
dle. 'l1lie insl'cler NJd -' ttl•
pren.Jeru "r ve 11etn II
three tJmea, 111d I aUll don't
know What it's au about.''
t oC fllf' otflM' flro;t
tara wen equ.a.lly puul·
. 4
The ftlm opens with a se-
quence entitled "The Oril!in
of Man .. Groups o f
prtruatei; ( m I d g e t s i n
monke> swls?) scrounge for
rood. then $bow the first
qims o( ag~reSSJon by fuss-
ing over use ol a water hole.
fn time a monofithic black
slab appears out ol the
rarth. Ttw-moolt:eys iinger 1t
wi th wonder. and their
puzzlemenC u noOunfe to ttle
f1lmgot1"s as CW well-form·
ed slab recurs m I.he Olm.
uSllally w 1th frightening
results.
Obviously the m<m0llth I!
a symbol But ol what?
Law? Mora.I force? Kubrick
dotslJ't take UI Into bta COO.
fidence.
One monkey l6lrnl to UJe
a bone as a weapon. and
murder enter• the ape com-
mt.a'\ity. The ldllv loUts the
bone into the 4W'. DielOlve to
fOW" mU.lloa years laltr aod
tbt boot becomu a satellite
recin« ~~· In "flACf' '2001 ' n1,,~ ~·
Tht milk-white precision et
the computer-brains -
lhese elements combine tic>
depict space adventure In
the nut century w f t h
remark.able reality. Tb•
conflH:t between l>e two
astronaut.a aad Che emoeA·
talking but demoniac: c&ll=
puter provide9 ~ M
rare excitement.
Bu.t d'len S111nlf'y ilMi
Obscure lapses into anollher
allegory in wtUcb tbe survJi.J.
1ng astronaut bu r t I et
~ psycbe4elic ~
and landl in ~bedroom. where be••_,.
dif'S, but 1IOt befOfe h
mooolllh appear• 4lt the
ol his bed.
Kubrick ls llMd as •
ducer. dlredot. co-au•
(w\tb Arthur c. Clarke) ...
designer and director ol
R]lllJCl.al photoar~ e.f ftef.a.
J{e miabt t>av• profiled b}
having a co-worte.r wbO
would have •~ked "''"• •wa.t•1 it6all • b 0 u t.
St11nl .. v"" 1
---.... __ ............ ._.,...,...... __ ------------·-_._.,. ___________ _...._..__._........,. ___ ._.._~~·..tlltte•l!!!!CllllollllM-.:.C• ........ r
\
!O DAil Y PILOT
EveryOM H•s
Somethi"9 Th.t
Som.on. Else w .rm-
HOUSH FOllt SALi HOUSIS FOi SA&.I HOUSES FOR SALE
~ .... 1000 CHneral 1• General 1000
Ocean View
Home on
Oceanside of
Hiway
walldni dlt1ancr to
beautlM Victoria 8eacb
apei beam celllnp
and warm bridt ~
In llvtni room
which apena onto
private IOlrpordl
2 bedroomJ. 2 bat.ha
IU1UlY bit· In kitc:brD
$41.500
<>wner win finance
Call:
Bob Ewin&
REALTORS
673-4400
for Those Who C111
Afford The Best
Sep sat•
Master Suit•
J'rcm rhc!o ~tat~Uke front
yard to the bt'autllully dte-
cnted Interior this home
stands by itself. 4 BJU, for-
mal dining lk'perate de!/
family room. 2~ baths Md
3 car garage with electTic
opt'nf'r. Near Country Chit>.
Allldng $43,950. co: rs
WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0,.n Evenlnt1)
!M14 Vista Del Oro
Newport BHcb
IA YSIDI HOMI
Gorgeoaus Watc'Vie'#
Brand New 3 Bdrm. 3 bath,
loeded with extn features,
Larp tt!8l patio, Spanilh
decor wUh tile roof. prbd
146.750.
Ph. 644-1133
We hllve a ~ l.nftux
of buyen trom our other
oUlces, 19 tn all & our tn-
vtttmeot dtvilion. We need
horn~ of an k\nda & m.ea
& Income unlll. In ec.ta
Mrsa. Newport area. If you
•~ thinkin& of ~ng or
tradit\1 up or down. s:tve ua
e call. We have the buyen.
Free A.ppBJMl1.
Eve. 646-SS
2'3 E. 17th St. MM494
Cotta Mesa hauty
Circular drive ~ to thlt
stunning resldft'lOf. Beamed
celllnf. s u N K EN lMna
room wtlh ninantic stone
tireplaOf. l BEDROOMS. 2
BA ll{S, Hardwood 0001"1. 2
Car Garaae. NO DOWN to
V tl5. LOW DOWN pa.ylMnt
to All. GREAT VAWE at m ,500 ln a prut.1ge 1oca.
tlon.
~
COSTA MESA omCE
2629 Hart>or Blvd.
~9C91 Open till t PM
s.owH SPWH
It'• PoOI time! lmmaculete
3 BR hclro.. ltm1y Tahitian
paol. ovutAndtna 'I a ' d,
tropkal planUJia, p a t I o.
~ beartnc fruit ~ ..
room tr tio.t. Owner lft•-Jna al'M.. Alldnr $25..ZSO
I' 'I I • \\ 111 I I
~· \H'\ll\\
... I Ii . I'
um Bilker, c.w. W6MO
SPECW
3 BR 2 bathl with covtred pa.
tio A prdm lath houae.
~ t,(, loan tn..nalft'&ble to
you at 1124 per month m.
dudfn& tun etc. Call DOW
for appointment.
$19,750
SwHpinC) View
Of the b9y, lights and Cata-
lina Wane! from the living
room and 11.f'den dt-ek or
this large 4 BR home. Att
you looklng for a home
Mth its' larie rumpus room
and alao room for a pool.
$49,950 with a low down pay-
ment.
Custom Value
A 11.J'Ke 3 BR home tor only
$37.500 in Newport Beach,
Newport m> aq. ~~of oversized btd-
at room.r, 2~ bath!, two mag-
nltlcftlt l'ln!places and a
Vldoria la.rgt family room. 0 n I y
ft~~ 646-1111 $3,750 down.
~~:.., :'.!es~i~~G
W;;AM:;;;I ·•·•R.~~'ff
6srf-~ :=~: ~T Ho~'"· is available for the di11-
cnml/\lting buyer, 1U1t1que
)114 Vista Dtl Oro mhTOr, stone and cathedral
Nf'WJ)Ol't Bee.cb ~lllng gract tbe living
E utl room f.rt.a. LuxunOUI wool
IK Ve carpeting i.r found through-l.eases out. VtrsatUe 4th bedroom
First t:UM oUered -
!rand MW ~ bomt
ovtrlooldna upper Newport
Bay -truly In the
twrury echtlon
hu 2 1tpante entriet. A de-
lightful ki~n and bunUy
room overlooks a lovtly low
maintenance patio garden.
A cont.ormlng txecutlvt type
area llWTounds thi11 beauti-
tul bomt, and I C'\11 dt SBC
street protects your children
lrom any thru tralfic. See
today. S38,950.
ean ror private lhowm&
Ph. 644-1133
This home muet be 90Jd to
aave ~ ownen' credit.
$37,500 principal balana! on 2043 WESTCLIFF DRJVE
the t1nt tnJ&t deed may be 646-7711 Open Evt11.
aasumtd at 6%"'1 lntf!ftSt. "KID SAFE'-, --~ ~.,;'~~ POOL HOME
beth&. fmnlly room, fonnal Ultra sharp. dean S ~
dbmg ..,__ Alldng $48,500 room. 2 beth beauty 'l'Vlth
but all otfen will be given l8x38 heated pool and cov-
aerloua ~Hon. Th.la ered petlo -Allume @xW-
home II a reel buy. Ing 5" bn and pey only
Colesworthy & Co. ~~ moodily lnduding tax-
642.1m 646-1111 • 546-2313
1904 Harbor Blvd .. C.M.
()pet! Eves.
()pet! Eve.r. til 9
THE fJEAL
E..C.;T ATERS VACANT
Spe.rk.l1nc ~ home on 1.-.IMiiimiiliililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~ tl'a~ce~~ Irvine Terrace
famlly room, 2 batha, mini-Lovely modtm homt with 3
mum ~yard, A heavy large bedrooms. 2 bath.~.
lhake roof. lrnmedlate poe-Hugt patio and well land-
l!Uion • a.lc:ln& $28,950 • llC8ped • BE.51' TERRACE
come and 1tt! CALL MR. BUY!
BLACK. 546-llSl. 0 p en Walln Huse
"""'
$19,518
3 BR 2 bath, complttely re-Mak• Money
decorated, Inc. n t ., car-On this wrll huilt 3 h«tronm
Ptls. Jmmediatt occupancy. home on a quiel c:ul dr MC
642· l nl 1treet. NHds some pain! &
tlbow gt'rlSI' to ht " lnvf'-
ly family home. A steal at
$19.950.
Evr. 6~82S9
CORONA DEL MAR-
COTTAGE 29.l E. 17th st. 646-4494
2 BR. ~ 1lvinl m . plus imimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
brick tirepliace, ~modt1«1 E tsid CM kill:Ml with p1 bullt-lnl. GS ~
Today'• best buy. $28,00. 2 BR home, dining room.
hardwood flooni. Clrptts.
~ drape1, double garage. 1c-
cts1 to ~ar ~· Quiet UlTl close in location. Sl7.500.
Well1-McCardle Rltrs.
34ll East 0>111 Hwy. 1810 Ntwport Blvd .. C.M.
Corona dd Mar 675-3745 548-7729 Evt1. 644-0684
Ideal Back Bay Area
Beach Home ~ fort'l!s sale or Met
Fumlshed 2 BR. 2nd tniJe C'OMll!'f homt. 3 and family ~m Ocnntront. S29.500 room at only S23.500 Wood
roof. electric built-ln11. M.Y
LIDO SANOS ree..onable ll'rms 1m1nged. Col ltge Rff I ty :>46-5880
3 Bdr~2~~ Betha 4 BDRM-$23,ooo.3 beth
~rg WUllamson RJtr Full dining rm. Built-In elec-m-cs: OPEN £Vci tnc kJtcben with dish" asnn.
LArge pet1o leads to double zw p.rage. Near scboot. A
TOP VALUE abopping. S40-1720
Jmt lilted. Two 11ory lour TARBEU. 2955 Harbor
bdnn tamily home· 'l'Vlth Steps to Ocean
diumJnc Spanllh de co r. Attnletlv 4 BR horn 2 ba ~ IJTlnr room, tonnaJ t '· • dtnlnr room and panel.cl wood btoam ~mn1111. 6 yrs
family • -•1 I old. 126.lm ">Om. .. °" 1 arp CA YWOOO R.L. TY ~ UOO ~ loc. Catdl thll low-U>6 W C H · low pricia -GUOO I I ! ! ' out wy' NB
Hurry I I MESA VERDE ~ REALTY ~ Ntat B«•ch. Salton Sea
' 8' it Joe.. lllnt R-1 lot. May
DAVIDSON • ....., Inda '°' truck. lat• Cat
VACANT • (JI -IUbmlt •bat YOU
5 llR + famSl'I. blt-tn.a. lkne. Aaldn1S32SO Hl-3511
lmrnitd. OCIC\lpPq, Oner SFERJUl) ID ~moa umoa.. Nol1ll Clll. $23,l!O. 3 BJl 2 ba, S19do. elec ldtcb
JUtr. mo Rartiar s. ac en~. dral>ft. " / w ~ z... 515QG <'Pt.I bfolU1!.lbll1 landic'l!*f, ________ , hit tftft. S:U.l50. S4D.2'7ll
A Dell Hewe LCE l Bdrms • Paymtl $141.
i:.tiU,. MW ~ ID l'itow-6~ Int. Cood 1oratJon Rut1y
part W e 1 t homa. Shah Rua.II. Rltr 5CS--22m "'°'-\oat doer. b4r petlo, BUSl!S'l ~ a
mall pr1ct ct PT.-• cow. n. DAIL! Pn.ot ~ "-tt1 5tl8IO Qa•HW .are. ,_.,.
~1!1111~-m!!!!~--i mcaeJ, &fat • ctlol1. &.-
OOIF! ll
. "" ..... . . -
""--· ... c ...... • ~ 'i • •• • ........... ~ . -
HOUSES fOR SA.LI HOUHS FOR SALE HOUS•S 'Ollt SAL• HOUSU Poa SALi HOUSIS POR SALE
-1i
' You C.n Sel It,
rincl tt, Tr•d• tt
Wrth • W .,,.+ A4
RENTALS
1• Gtfterat 1000 ,_.. V.,. 1110 Cm ., Mw 1250 Huntt.e•• luch 1400
--------Costa Mesa 21
General
HOUMI Funt..,_.
BE 1111\l:MMDl:tn DIVI & SPLASH GOLf & FAMILY OiOtCE location. o c ea a TIRED ct run· o1 -the · mill -------
llUIU'U. Ut I IJI UU. maanlti«nt l0x40 Mesa Verde GoU coune, l Sidot cl Hwy. Cann A boula? Run-down tract VERY dan 3 bdrm home
EARN a-..t-ate'u Sll,OOO Ov.l De I u x t ANTHONY block. N.w cu.tom Medil~ ~ 'ff/ootWl ., I e • . area! mLS klftly 2-lt)'. with larp ttnCfd rur yard,
YV'UAU" v SWDOONC POOL. Party reao style. 4 BR. 3 BA, awr, S9IC 3 BR. J ba t.mre. ·former model home ii in • comp 1ete1 Y tumllbed.
irot.5 Income an n u • 11 Y· on a.. wide deck aneJ, urlous. .we Tahiti, ft7,600. ll&0.000. Open Sat only 1-S •utUul, t.amlly·typr atta Available lmmed\atd)'. $175
Owner will sacrlfict hiJ East ,..._,....___ c..,. .,.,"", """"'~ p.m. Mt Haul Oriw. ol quality ·bomel; 5 min. to mouth. ~ 541HH1 11th Street~ Certer ~ have a separate ,,_...,.,.,., ,,__,,o . wt uh. ~ play area Oil dill ----Oranrt Cout Property beach A xlnt abopptne l BEDROOM, den or dirlinc
Laundrymat th 30 w bis lot. On:ular drivt ~adJ Collaaa Pa. ~ 1115 m MariUerite. CdM m.l850 attu; walk to eltmentatY area. Adulta $130 wttb era, 10 dryen, plus extru. -------actiool, bua W"VJCe to Jr, Hi WILL CONSIDER TRADE to una ltunnl~ • BED-OWNER Lido .... 1351 • Hieb acroo11. utilltlH. 333 w. &y St., CM
-.·oR RESIDENCE OR DU-~ 2 !t;H M!Sidence 3 Le Bdrm, 2 ba, fam rm. 4 Bdrm•.. 21At betba, lar&e BACH Apt. Adulta only. Util
Pl.EX. Ex~llent value tor Lunestone Oll-de-uc, patio. frpl, nb A PllU"!X:T tam1ly home, tam1l1 rm, with p&Dtlina A ~. $60 mo. ~
I rttired couplt. FULL block FIREPL.ACE. Built-ly lndlC'Pd. tint ad>OOI a.ru, ~ blk tc> dub. temlil and frplc:, opens to COY. petio; Barbor Blvd. 60-7563
PRICE ONLY $12,500 -In Kitchen. 1'.A. beat. lnlt>I" $24.000. ~ Tulane. L 0 w ~. 5 BR 4 Ba, love-attra· llv. rm. w/frplc ..
SubmJt Ttrma -and Jet us ' com, i car ganlge. NO down. ~2 lY patio, atp. din rm A lddl' fam1J,y dlnJnc nn. 1lland-Corona del Mar 2250
ltlOW )'OU bow to make DOWN VETS · F1iA Tenni. 1V rm, ln!arrmJ. contm>-~ ldtdle:n w/elec. bltns • ~ta lea than rtnt! A a. ............ b r...-•· a. 2 BR. 2 ba, 2 kitc:benl, 6Jm. rnonty.
Evtnin&J CaU 673-6116
ONLY $500-
MOvEs YOU IN
Fantastic Newport Heightl
home -Complettiy redec-
orated, 3 bdrms. 2 bath11 -
Custom buth-lns -Ltaae
option. S185 per month.
BEACH DUPLEX
~i block to ~ -Custom
built -3 bdnn1 up " 2 bd:
mu down. l...arge double
~ plus stonsge -Look
at this for $43.~Tly 10%
down.
646-7171 546-2313
Open Eves
THE ~BAL
ESTATERS
HARBOR VIEW~
HILLS
Corona del Mar
Lusk -built bomu located
1n the Southland'• most dt-
lirable A fudnatinc arta.
Schools It Calif. Irvine
Campu. just m o m e n t 1
away.
Sensibly priced ~m
SJ.1.900 to $48,Q
LUSK HOMES
Dlrectloru: MacArthur Blvd.
from Pacific Coast Hwy. or
Newport Fwy. Turn on San
Joaquin Hill1 Rd.. then
follow llgna to model area. zwzs
Different? Decidedlyl
An architect desilJled thls
homt for fun living! He in-
cluded a !amity room, a
lll!J)ft.rltt play room, a pool.
2 tlre-place11, B bar, 4 bed-
rooms & 1 11uper -kitchen!
It nimblu all ovu thc!o lot
in Baycrt11t and It's a charm.
er! Call us -wt'd love to
llhow it to you.
Ruth Pardoll, Realtor
lfiffi WestcllU Dr. 642-S200
-WANTED-
Real Estatt Salts Peoplt.
WHY NOT GET ON rnE
sum WAGON?
Over 75 Y cars In
Oranl?e Counly
• full pal?e 11rlverti$lng
• lnlrr nUacP lelrtype
• Training program
• ln~uraner
• Many other henefits
Call 646-l-IS-t -For mtrrvicw
BALBOA-ISLAND
Dup~x nE>ar Bay. 2 BR 1
balh .i.. 1 BR 1 bath. Good
rental area. Owner Jives out
of ar1>11 • vl'ry an.xioos to
sell. Only SJS.500.
Rltr fi.ll>.3.<1'28 Eve. 642.(7)85
Otrit'e ()pm Sat. Sunday
*LACHENMYER
BY OWNER--
NO GIMMICKS!
JuRt II niCI' 'I Br, 1~ h•ltl'\
borne in top condition. Enlry
hall, din. l.rt'8 !both cal"
Pttedl, h.w. noors. m ~ n y
extras 2'111 Raleici:h A •t ..
C'.M. lhv appointment onlvl
$22,900. 548-3575
3 Bdrm 3 hilths Dclu.'<e on
quit! CU~f'-UC strttt and
Mt~• V1>rde Coll Course.
Pool and wattrf111l.r. PRrtly
tum1~td. SlS.500. Good
trrms.
Bania &tally
64U5(,()
A COOLPOOL
For a Iona hot sutnml"r
4 BRs 2 baths, flreplac .... ell"
prting. p.11Uo It beautifully
la.ndxaped yard. S23.~ •
S3000 bandlt'-LOO<llART
RLTY ~ 646-2301
N rt B --L 1200 porary R.duced to $15.000 • uuu.... ar ....... I"' .. • BARGAIN!! Will trade tor _•_w_po ___ •_IMOn____ for lmmedlat. II.le. f!l4.39IM drapes, thluout. L a r 1 e ,
aa1ler bome. BA YCREST 3 BR. 2 BA, fam or tM-S6N tor a,ppt. blocll·walled yard, nicely
House. Gard«i. W mo. 514
Fernltaf. 67J.536e, 642-3645
rm. S~'9 In. 1935 C.Ommo-----------landlcaped. 2 Car prqe.
dore Rd. Owner. 50.om Newport leach "Mon-In" coadltioo! Of-L• hie
548-0070. la..lh. ftttd by CJIWllO' at $37,000. ...,-.-V-L\-.-u· -_ _...--__ -_._-•
2351
COSTA ~ OITJCE
2829 Harl>or Blvd.
_.. J Call: 8471640 after 6 PM. .. ..,. ll ......., •TIJna .... '""
N rt •---L 1100 Lovl!\Y 4 BR. .an)'tlme on weektnde. . Via do Nord. CaD 213: _•w_._po __ uw_...,... ____
1
WI txtr1I l&e IW'll'IY patio ~ 213: 2'70-t.W1
Only i&t.500 Sol Vista W /Pool ~9491 Optnilll9PM BAYVIEW
DUPLEX
67>1&12 EvH. 5&1281 Atrium entry. 4 BR 7 beth.I,
Model Home
NR. ORANGE COAST"
SOUTif COAST PLAZA
$32,950
C>wnl>r MUST .ell! Just 1
yr old, 3 BR + tam rm, la
entry, air cond., cust. dra1>-
et1 thruouL Loll ol special
• decoradona. Prol. landac.
front A rnr. Call for appt
to see.
Eves It Sun 49'2-2493
Town & Country RHlty
2106 N. Mam S.A.
547~ or 547-8512
Huntington ... ch 1400
OPEN DAlL Y 12: 30 to 5 PM ·
18l2 W. Balboa Blvd. $500 0,..m Cottae-
blt-1111. dishwasher. Assume
514 % GI loan pey&blf! at
S178 per month tncluding
taxts.
TRADEWINDS RL TY
lMZ-5011 or 842..SOU
OWNER: 4 br, 2 ba., la.nd-
!ICJ>., frpl, Xlnt achls, $24,SOO
S4S-8832 aft S or wkends.
O>mpl@tely fum lrg homey 3 bech'ooma. l betbit, living
unit, bit-In R & 0, w/w c:pta, room with Rmna.ntic Fire-
REAL frpl. 2 bdrm loot plaot. Beautiful kitchm,
huztJ, 1" ba. P8tlo. Extra forced air beat!nr. 2 car
view unit above o'lfu pr. pral", ~ encloeed yard,
WALK TO BEACH. P"MI for cbUdttn. Owntn ---------movl.nc wry aocm. Try 1!500
$32,500 Down, Pl)'mf!ftt -bl!
TRY 10% DOWN rent.
Agt 673-8690, Eve ~
Bayf ront at $65,500
3 Hae on ~ ac-Horsn It
inc. Total rent inc $4400
yrty. S39.SOO. su. ne. ~
GT1
WHAT A BUY! Hard to t1nd in Exclusive 7682 EDINGER. Laguna Beach
Balboa Cove11 -slip for boat S42.~ OPEN EVES 1705
Owner u.ya •ll now! 2 bed-
room, 2 beth. Assume low
interest ~ fllA loen wath
payment or only $911 per
month Incl~ rverythinir.
M-(y Rent!? Call now. It
won't lut. Walker k Ltt,
.2034 Wf'Stclitt Dr. 646-mJ,
Open Eves.
~
3 Bdnn. 2 bath on buch. ·
Out of town owner -submit 1700 SQ. FEET
R. C. GREER, Rnlty 3 BR 2 bath ~ kllchHI
3416 Via Lido lin-9300 + teHng a.ua, tam rm, l!v-
NR. Bay A ocean; love!y 3 Ina rm. master BR., plt'nty
BR 2 Ba home oa 2 loU; of cl08tta •ce. + prlv1te
.:an ui.e a1 2 aptl. Rm. to beth. located on • larae lot.
bid. S46.500. Sell all or ~ Oea.n & sharp. Many many
int. or trade. 121 fut St., can extras.
park '" rtar 0wner m-271.9 1, rllage Real Estate
4 BDRM, 2 beth, 5 yr old. 96:i-44TI 51).Blo.1
Cub privllegts. Best 0Utr1---------
buy1. Urgent Sale! $28,000 .~
2043 WFEl'OJFF DR.IVE Opet Hoose Sat A SWl at BEACH TNCOMEI
646-7711 Open Eves. 3.51 61nd St. 675-0144, Near-new abaJct roof trlp~x
646-6111. 547-7401 own./agt. with carpeting. drapuies a:
ENCHANtiNG Bay vltw; 3 built-ins located jU1t off
BR. 2 Ba., all elec .. 2 sty. Beech Blvd. $39,50 -c:beck
FANTASTIC Btrr TR U E. deeded fnhou.u; 2,000 'Cl ft ttrms.
BeautlfUI 3 BR home on cor-Carefree liv .• w/poola, etc. Pacific Sbo!'ff Rnlty
NO DOWN
TO VETS
Now $39.500 6U-4.l56 53&.8894 ~. 536-2375 ner lot with firep'3ce. w/w
carpttlng, 2 baths & im· BY OWNER -Newportl~~~~~~~~~
mac:ulRt.e rHidentlal. area. Shores SJl.000. 4 bdrms. 3 s21,4u
Even has lf'PMlle 9eTVice bath. N EA R 0 CE A N. iJV
porcta. $178.50 mont.h in-00-~ alt 6 PM or Sat It •
cludts bl~n. Call 540-1151. Sun. GI APPRAISAL
Open eves. BA YCRE:Sr BY OWNER Fixer • "PPtl' 3 BR, tam.
----------. 5 Large Bdrm.r. 3,250 aq. n. nn w/frplc. Needt aome
.......... ~BJAQ I Ivan Wtlls built. F~ land. pa.Int. Owner'1 purc:based
M llrAll' ZTOO Windward Lane new bomt.
Several NEW HOMES IN
LAGUNA Bt>acb, 5~
DOWN, NO C L 0 SING
COSTS. Carpets, drapes.
~aping. bll·IM LOS
PADRES REALTY, 8 9 5
Glenneyre Strfft Laguna
Beach. Pb. 494-8833
RUSTIC CHARMER
OCEAN VIEW • Early Calif
•l:Yllna shake root. spacious
3 BR. Fam ~n. Fonnal Liv
rm, w/w crpll, drapn, blt-
in kltch. log burning Frplc,
Forced Salt price S32.950.
Mias.Ion Realty en•> ~
SEE thl1 custom bullt. near·
1.>· ntw cha.rm homt. Stun-
ning ocean view. 2 BR.
2 BA., m a n y built-Ins.
$4.5 ,000. Owner. 3C7721. Drift-
wood, So. La.auna 499-JUS
3 BR., 2 Ba .. borne; level lot;
beaut. view. Sep. 4tn. rm ..
sunken liv. rm .. quarry tilt,
!>tam etil.: 3 patios. By
Owntr. S38,500 49Hi942
OCEAN VIEW 3 BR 2 Ba. fl>I,
deck11, paUo. SJJ.*Xl. Owner,
494-5678, 833-5441
---------W OCEAN FRONT BRASHEAR REAL TY • 847-8531 gg.u73 Latuna Nlgwl Comer. 1 br, dbl pr, c:pts. --=~,......,,=-==--=-~=---1707
drpt, S49,500. 494-9271 TWO FOR THE iohn mGCftGb BY OWNER..+plex. Balboa PRICE OF ONE
CAMEO SHORES
EXECUTIVE'S Home -
OcN.n View 3 bdrm. 2\4
lMth, with pool. Prffi11e
~ • Monarch B I y .
Vacation Rentals 2900
BIG Bear Lake. 2 Bil, on
lakt. pvt dock, frpl., by dy,
wk. or mo. n•: 1166-3001
PO Box 844, Big Beat Lake
RENTALS
HoUllM UnfumltMd
General 3000
MLSS100 V~ laftty S BR.
2 &.. rebii· a.tr-cand ..
carp., drapes; bltnl; patio,
fncd. l YI'· old. Nr. Fr'wy. 6
IC'hol. L@aae. ~246(
Costa Mea 31
3 BDRM. Din. nn. Liv rm
and den. 2 Be. Beaut )'d.
Newly deconled. LR $225
mo. 267 Robin Hood Ln
642-1447 all S: 30
NEAR Ntw, lovely, 2 BR •
den. 1 '4 ba. Fncd yd. Excel
Joe. Lse $200. Avail May lit.
Call afl 4pm. 642-7155
E/sidt. 2 Br, frpl, beams,
wlnut pnlng, fncd yd-patio,
adlts.. no pets. S'128 yr.
673-7629
3 BR. 2 Ba. dbl. garaie;
ftnced yd. 2283 Pacific
C.0.11 Mesa. 646-1304
2 BDRM. gar, patio, tropical
setting, quiet for adults, 1
blk IJ>opa, Sl40. 646-2267
Newport 8!!.ch __ 3200_
Exdusive
Townhoutff
Conpnlal ...........
Fireplace-Cpts/Drps .. all'
kitchen bit/in.I. Community
Pool -Yard M&intl!!allce.
2 bdrms. 2 baths .•• SD>/Mo.
3 bdrms, 2% beths .. $250/?do.
BAY & BEACH
R.eatty, inc.
2025 W. Balboa BIVIL
673-3663 Eve1: ~
3 BR. 1 BA, DO blt-IM,
Qltf Revt11, nr achools
childM1 welcome. Large
Yard. Sl.65 mo. &46-550l. LARGE view home with oval
pool. C'llbaoa, 4 bclrms, lan-
aJ., 51, baths. See this tXCit-
ing homr lor SllS.000.
Blvd. Good buy! Rffa. Nice 2 BR home, hshly
down. 776-4357 painted + a rental on the
WATERFRONT 62 Balboa back of the lot. Priced tor
CovH 3 BR. $75,000. Will tut sale at SlS,SOO. Huntl_...n Beach 3400 oonstde trad U 8-777l Paul Jon" Realty .......
~. cpts. drp1. Vacant
-owntr anxious lo eell.
$86,500. Phone -499-1344 or
OPEN DAILY
1627 PERHAM OR.
Call !or Appl.
642-8235
Havt you wanted to live tn a
home with a view of Bay or
Ocean. We have them from
3 to S bedrooms. Some with
pools. F'or amall er Jarie
lami\.Y's. F'rom $45,000 to
$100,(XXI. Wby not stop by or
c:alJ for infonnatlon.
Ev~ .. 56-Slet
T t . 847-1266 Evts. lMZ-5844
----:-;:m;w=:-"':"3 -:-bdrm-:-.-:3-:b-ath-:--h-om-e, FOR LEASE
Newport_ ~gta. 1210 New Listing In Monarch Bay, Cpu 4 BR 2 ba Townhoule, 1ge
547-7761
BY Owntr $22.500: 3 BR. 1% &auUtully decorated Mett-Landscpd in front. Room tor Priv•tt covered petio. blt-ln
BA. ntwly cari>eted. Nice dlth G~s. tri-levcl home pool. A luxurious borne, R It 0, clothes 1"Lllher/dry-
patio in rear, lnsul8ted ceil-with wt>t bar, plush carptt-reasonably prlced Bl SS2.!ll0. er & retrlg, bMutltul red
lnp. Allty 1..c:cess tor \ng It: drapes etc. Vacanl -Phone 49&-1344 or 547-7761 ~. tbe u• at a pool
c:a.mc>er or trlr or n~ reedy for offer. Listed at Ocean Vft custom borne. & tenn.11 court. We mam-
a~. 0<* to 1eboola $39.500. 2 bdnn A dm, l bath borne. tain the lawn. Only $115 per
Rm. for pool. 2501 Margaret ColJese Ralt:y ~ in Monarch Bay. Cpts. It mo. lnr Ada.ma A Brook·
Dr., N.S. 213: 256-2265 dl'Jll and euy maintained bunt, H.B.) e CHIAPI CHEAPI NO DOWN GI lndlcpiJli. Fine home st Call Mon. th"1 P'rl. ~
Cheapest 11na11 bou.e in ONLY $395 COSTS $79,500. Call 49&-5791 or Salt or lM. Nt-beach. Spac
Npt Hta on !ht fttl1' of a 3 BR + recreation room 547-T161 'l.quna Nl&uel 4 BR bom•. 1" ... epta,
1a.rp (50'~') I~ lot. l" bath. Good buy! Corp. 16x40' patio, dshwwhr, trpl
Beam Oflllnp, l bdrm, gar Heffdal Realty Cozy, 3 BR. NiA borne. & bltna. Owner. 96z.o225
It wrltahop. SlS.950 FP. "Homes to Match lncoml"" ld.tal for ret:ln!d coup~ 4 BR. 2 Ba., n , w 1 Y
Realtor 673-~ S740 Wam~r 342-4405 Or young couple's first decorated. 2 Car gar. Lc-
REOUOD FOR Q UI CK 5 BR 3 bath. den, family, HCl'Tle. $2(.900. Also a yard. O!ildml O.K. $160
SALE CT>t•/d'rpl, p11tio. cul-de-5 BR. 2~ BA homt n~ly Month 962-4219
2 S34 """ .. ,., "" Cl 1 Landac~ with 1 u p " r b ;::::;-=---=-=~=---------Bdnn bomt. 316 El eac. ,U\N • .,.,. ·10 oan FOR LEASE • Exf'C'Utin
293 E 171h St. 646-449-1 Modena Avt., ow n e r + cub dn. 962-5835 view. S32.500. 496-5791 home 2 story 4 BR 3 bet.ha.
---642-7757 -OPEN -MUST SELL Dupluea For Sale 1975 Avail May 1st. Call Vlllaae LIDO ISLE 3 BR. cust. home. by owner. Prutigt, nr. tlfw; atrium, R.E. 96:2-4471 or 546-81().1
Ownt-r 4'avtn1 area bot Baek Bay atta. 2 8'., 3 Bdrma. 5241 Glenroy Or. 2-2 BR Apts yard, pr., 3 BR It 4 BR, l'4 BA. wanl~ II wl'ektnd C'Ott9ge. frplc .. bdwd. floors. 5~% By Owner 842-7271 Quiet ~. C.M. 1175 A n.95. One ll1lle from
Will tra<Uo for Y&cant land loan avaD. $29,500. 642-2859 OREGON bound. mil.It ~ll! $JOO) dn. • 534-2511 beach. ~'7144 ~ 961-MW
or ~II hlli 4 BR 5 bath 2 AV AIL trnmed. Olif Haven 4 BR. 2 BA, ~ahaven ~-OIARGE m N lil"t'pln<'I'~ 3 cu rani'· 3 Br, 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean .Frplc. $21,~. Owner MM248 White elepbantst Dtme..a-Une ,.;:t: ~~
5:nl !1C1 II home. ACT FAST! Vu lnc Apt, $49.SOO. S48-'12491=~=:-::==:====.::::7.=::::i:~::::==~~~;;~=~~~~~
s.1l0.<XX1 loan available. Pffwport W .. t 3375 Newport W..t 3375 Newport West 3375 WALLY M('(.'()Y REALTY Coron• del Mar 12SOI __________ ..;.... ____ _..;..:...:..~:..:.:!:.::.:..:-=.::.,=::__..:::::.:
~ anytime ~ -------------1 OCEANVIEW 5 BDRMS. Holllt' and Income. ~ block
For 119.750 and allWIW loan to beech. l BR. 2 ba + 2
w St<m dn. Pro.... loo. I BR 1 ba unit. e .ooo. 7ll
cpd. 5!>11,.,. trans .. must •II Margumtt.
now: Cll 11. I..omtJM
Dt>lt.1 RA-al £state 646-4414 Aho blln otbtts ranrinc
-------from S29.<m to -~.
Costa Me1a 1100 Oranre ~ Property
INVE.<IT\IENT. ~ llouMo 332 Ma.tJU«ite, CdM ~
on litt lot. °'°6ce loc. -Reprdezl lleprclal-
Bu$lnrss ~ion. 117.l"JO. C'P11t UM bonM mabon awe:
640-j.) 12 d~ daambrft I eaucbtr
rAGNIC I r I I: I
BY OWNER VA tlO down. p011r tcmuneO "JAlblt. You
Golfers I m.sm. • 8R. Hl Ba. am wm ai.o haft Ult ~
5f't' this outmlndlnci: l bath nn . Wm WU.. •• Ammcan l(y~ ldtc:t. • tam ICINIP I .' I I I .
home sltuatfd on the Utta room .$34,500. ()pee Wa'f
Falrwil,y ot Mt59 Vmte•1 n9,'50 day l~. 5ll Potnkttla. Coune. 3XlO 1q rt ol T'MI GI no !In. E. adt. F'ClrOt Del.Aney R.uJ Elita.a.
d\arm at SO.~. Hurry• Co. &4?-5009 50-4519 mJm
Collfl.r Ratty S46aaO MM. Ver• 1110 EXa..tmVE, ext c tat I ft, ~~~!!!!!!!'~!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!11 __ ram~ lloaMo: 41.ll. s
BY OWND\: ProleaScNUy Ca.mb11dae mcJdtl. -... 9&., ... Gt., Ip.~
lnda:p A df'C'OI' S tit', 2 ba, ft.; l BR.. Ul aa., ll'd' lot: hlettd pOGI: cl 'b 1 .
blt-tm. uti1 rm, 2 trpls, 16."SO «rl. patio; boet fll trtr. • ..,.,.~ dllt ciond.; w1l1 all
tq.' · ~ )~ ntA. Hr ....,. ll"tl Hew •"1 CJllnr: tum. tad. • p pt I a 11 c e • .
OCC ra.aso 59-"'7 $~ ~ 1oati. 81 _... C.:meo hw. Pt1clflt to
NEW. Nrvtr llYld In: 2 BR. SSt.500. 56-etll lntllMd. OwftW 714:
2 Ba, l'OndO.: carp.. drapn. BTOwNga. .. ..... ! ==m-=1-=-~-=i-----bltne: J car pr. nt.!AIO. bl!N.. ram ,... ....., Pfft a., Ocantrc.t, • br.
Owntt 6'+-ld ~ d.alrwaliT "'"' cp-. acrw Ira faa f'ltpnt to "' Io rt ,
Need a~? yard. sZ-GI l•aa. ..._ 11,a M+-2Slt
,,,,. " w11b • ..... , s.1-1394 OIAJtGE m
-~ .... .. -.. ......... ........ __ ... __ ,,....;:._,::____;_ __ ... ., ..... __ , ___ _ -
~S_Y..,l_A..,...s __ _,I CJ.tc to cuatonw In a cha I I r I .,.. ...,, modom, loc*rng
----· __ ..._._ ..... 'Ml~ b the -thla
I L " N 0 , I B lAbo 1·· 1 I I' 1: !£r:~z~=
! in.~,f'US r r r r 1· r l'J
• ;rscmsW& umas To I I I I .I I I J -
• ,,. 'Dlt ....... ---... ...
SCU_MLITS ANSWUS IN CLASSIFICATION 6590
' -t
__ __ .......... -.-.......... -.
\
100
50
m.
il4
= 51
'25
:3:
Ml
y,
01
e
I
IO
\..
1..
D, •
n
!.
5
II
• !I
I.
-t,
'• ..
l
l
,
----
Multi Only
Dtacrtminatlve Tenants toe Preatige Addreu
Mount. & Detert 6210
Sk.,./~eu
Bo&t Matot. Nl ar • part
tiino. P. 0. Box 1041 CM
S'8 ·356l
Jolt Wanhld, Lady 7020
~Sr~ .~ta.ry
Top sldlla A refertncee
~ AJte:r I P.M.
MALE White cat. Vic ot
OlroDa del Mar. 073-8309
Lott
W ALLE'l' (Rclt>ert F. Martin)
lcwt Newport Beach area.
KetP money for !'f'Ward &:
addl1onal SlO reward oa
return. S3+-5l.52 1J09'l Sim·
mona, Ontwe. Calif.
Whtddy1 Went? Whlckty1 Gott
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION fOR
NATUIAL BORN SWAPPERS
Special Rite
DAYWORK REFERENCES
9 to • Own 'l'nlns SIS.
541..()121
EXPER. woman wanlS Apt.
Mar. Job at bf'llch. Sal. t.
apt. 1 · 622~ collect
-Want Housework Deya. I llMt - 5 times -5 buclu
au1.11 -"°Mun IHC\.VOI
,_.... -"'" .. If-. ... 'Mlat "" -"' " ...
Exl>erlcn<·ed
• 5'C7·1326 • ... 'tOU. """" _,_ ........ ~ .... .. ••114~
~TMINO l"Olt SAU -TltAtlll OflL.YI CARPET-Cleanin&. Floor
stri.pp11111. Wuinr. Walls,
Windows washed. 5314i67 'HONE 642-5671
LOST U wt cMd white l\Jrr)' To P .. ce Your TrMter'• Parldlse Ad e PR.ACMCAL-NURSE .-
4 BR. 2'-' Ba. homt>: 2 !pl., Local Dot.1on "'4<'"U'lre.\
tam. rm., etc,, xlnt Hunt. 646-1790 or 646-9866
pullP)', ric Rlver le H St.. '51 Ford PU tr/shell camp.
NB. "Mota" -Has stnng er. Trade tor 5().15 hp John-
ot beeda, fi<'a c o I Ja r . IOO or EvinNde outboard
PLEASE notify. fiEWARD motor. 5600.19 ~ --,,..-~-,---.,---P-.lm ~ al'ea. TR.ADE
Gtty f~ min. roodle, 165' x 330' tree l d ear trtlct
vie E4lnler 6 Coldtt West. or $2500. equity in 5 acre.
J."ri4Q'. U. No 129'11 H. a. for 'IW' "--.. other Reward •u4l. or MT·12M ,......,._.. .....m cam,pe.r. ~ Bu,,__, cat lost vicinity '
Udo Ille. Please return. TRADE PAI..?f SPRINGS 673-mt. 929 Via Lido llM aereep toR EQUITY
Nord, N. B. ln duplex or other multiple
Bch. loc. Val $31,<XXI WANT· ========-
duplex, Wlits, or ? Ownt>r Job Wanted
841~ eve/wknds. Men & Women 7030
36' Yawl: Dae wls. Grey. APT. Managlrif job wanted
marine aux. sips 6, ga.1.ley, b Ca bl dred pl bd, cmpl eqp, nu prit. Trd Y pa e, ~ cou e.
eqty tor late mod cmpad or ====548-====-
foreJgn car. 347-8387 Domfftic Help
TRADE UO,IXX>"Eq in choice ----------
7035
5 ACRES -IUlxlivt.lon. LOST Sa~. Arlams and =uni_ts._~_Wl-:-----...,..
BLACK, part per 1 l a n, Silver Valley -18 mUea M~,. 'tan Cocke:-poo. II Have epe.clous 4 bdrm +
female cat, yellow eyes. East ol. Barstow. "Land ol wffb •Clid. R e w 1 rd I family room, 3 baths, home
Ba:t View 3 BR 2 Ba all elec LJVE INS
2 sty., 2000' deeded tnhouse. Employer pays ree1
FOR late car, T .D.'11, house Geo~ge Byland Agency
to $30,<XXI Owner 673-4356 106 B E. t61h, S.A. 547-0395
Vic. 19th A: Newporl Found Lakes". 80 m1n-11M1de lakes 962--0132 or 847-tl\5 in C08ta Mesa. Want older
Allt· Util pd. 1 man MARTINlftUE 2 wlta ago. M&-3224 Ext. 36 ln area. AUalta, flah rah-2 to 3 bdrm home tor ru ,IXX>
H Trlr. No pets. T Ing, ~ational, m a n y Person•la 6405 equity. Phone ~8856
1-BR &. den Doll hoose, So. Chinese -Engllah • funch
Lake Tahoe; $11,~ FOR Prrmament, t'Xper. L1vc-1n
prop, ol equal eq. in local Far East Agcy. 642-870.1
area. Consider cletu', wide • lfiCil after 1 pm. GARDEN Am. lust.._ Rentel 6060 development.a in progreu. 317 A. ranch land: road,
£ 2 BR. Elec bltna, SUOO. acre 20% dn. 1% per • PHONE PAL • e~ water avail. 0 ont,y ~. 713 *-8273. Help W•nted. Men 7200 Adults only. 361-B Parklib IUmlUDdiop Bli storaa-e Guqes • ~ mo. can owner M7-6640 Safest We:/ to meet people. $2SO per A. WW divide.
'S1!> mo. 642-13 nJRNLSBE:o BAOIELORS Pl'OQt. lO x ,_ x lO' bisb i.u a1t. 6 p.m. W e e k e D d 1 Fer SS. meet by phone, 5 I'RADE for Fite units. Own-34' MONTElREY mo~le AQUA-AIRE
U Palnu 1 a: 2 Bil UNJ'ORN 1BR•2 BR.• I BR mo. l626 (fter) Npt Blv. CM anytime, Alk tor Lee. ~:';!. ~~~~~. ~., er/ Ait 847-3444
or Um Sll5-$150. Rtd 2 ~ nailabJe • ExceDmt l.A>altion. Fun Cottage $5~ ht TRUST DEED
emer), s to s radio, closed
cabin Il,ying brl~. Ex. NEJW DIVISION OF EAST-~ toe mlall home or ERN MFG. F~\1' NOW 1T7 E. 22nd St.~ Carpets. dNpel, ,.,... ~ly ttec. ...... 1Tll'40 and 5 ACRES. $29.9!15 PALM, CARD READINGS. EXCHANGE roa. lt.te Dlo-
"1m Apt. Ad1Jlta 11th & Santa Ana, C.M. 1813 Hutor C.14. .... BRJ!XX NOIT RL'lY 548-6355 HELP IN ALL PRO. cl.el car OR beet OR ••. ?
atbmit After 6:30 PM KrnlNG, WE NEED 2'l ~ MEN TO TRAIN IN ALL
BR Unfum Home NM233 M66!W2 WANTED • a: 11~ ~985f. '142! Owner/Alt. ~44
Vkt«1a. 54M1.31 !l!!!!!!!!!!mll!!!!!!B!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!l'I quamn. Prefer tonner ltNI E1t1'9 S.rvtce 6215 W!SnCNSTER AVE., 646-&ll 547-7401
----,--.,-...,..---1 DD"I'S. NO EXPERIENCE
Trade 1982 Marit 9 J aguar, NECESS., AS WE TRAIN.
!Oassic) White 4 dr sed, STARTING SALARY
ROOM, utiJs paid, fl'O. FAIRWAY __.. omc.. 5i>-l'19S Q. T. GUNDERSEN ALCOHOL!~ Ano~QI Would IJlte to mde equity
llo CM YJll 1 lftft Ra! Estatie A.JIPl'1l1Mr 8~ A.ref.. Phone 673-8724 ln '68 nAT SPYDER for 1;::: ~ ~ 1a~e = $495 PER MO.
3. ' . . LUl Arl.11 Office Rent.I 6070 GTS-1642 Eve 5&1281 P.O. Box 1223 Co1ta Meaa. olde!-but ebari> Vot.Je E======= LAGUNA BEACH WAG:Df ~ ~. 544-8941 att 6:30. FOR INTERVIEW CALL
HAVE: 4 BR + tam rm + MON. A: TUES.
4200 l BR APTS Dalt space1 available 111 R. E. Want.cl 6240 YES. Yes. Red '62 Chev PU, 16' boat, 35 hp POOL b .. n.u~.. t motor, trlr (Baja rig) Trd
547.()607 dWI. 2000 1q ft, No. CM loc. --------
UO,IXX> eq Want: UkAt prop. S11ffmen a Mln1gen
Anaheim or Nlerton. Rltr. Career opporty with leadilli
54&-5460 eves. 545-6142 tinn offering o•er 100 mu-
TO
ADULTS ONLY
Manager Mn. CaJ'IOft
20122 Senti Ana Avo.
54U260
newest otttc. -• HAVE Equltle1 A: IOrM cub Announcements 6410 all or pert for late model prime locatke ID downtown to trade for mote.I on ttM van camper. 842-3798 ~ c=-ed.Airbe•= =-i!;n1~~~ 1:1Y~ Coast Health Club _Wha_t_do_you--&hlnk--ot-our-
Plllded partf~. T" o Eves I weekend I, 213: e FREE SAUNA e "TRADER'S PARADISE"
entrancts; rear leads to 257_3901 With SwedUh maasaiie by Drop UI a card. Cualtled
Mm.\---Vet-rde--ve9--, -.-ttrac-1 Munldpal parJdDa Iota. $50 PRIVATE part&' to uune 1 Experienced Massuese' Oept, P.O. Bax 18'15, Dall)t ~ 2 BR. CJ1't.*, dr]ls, tit· peso moedl for 1P9ce. Add •--on 3 _ 4 BR house OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK Pilot, Npt Sch, CaW. 15 tor df!llr mt! cbalN. Add ...,, .,. t am-10 pm
Have TD'1 & other equities.
Need 3 to 20 unit's. Madge
Davis Realtor, ~ W.
Coast Highway, Np!. Bch.
642-7ro>
tual funl11. Full or pt time.
No exper nee, we train.
Npt Bch ottlce, 842~
Santa Ana office, 5'7-83.ll
Invelton Flnandal
Servi~•. lnc. Int, Ip trees, walk to thopl, $10 fer bu.slneu boun an-536-8276 132 E. l!tb St. 642-S<XlO * 4300 adulta, $1Z mo. 8'1S4I07 n«dDc la"lb.. AD utWtla
;:,::..._Badl __ et_or_A_pta_. -p05 a cept ttiepboM. BUSINESS encl Funerals 6412 GOOD ROtrI'ES * * * * * CARRIER BOYS
util Incl $15 up Newport leach 5200 DAILY PILOI' FINANCIAL AVAILABLE
E . .,,_,boa Blvd. ......, • 2 BR .... ..a.. 2 ba 222 FORm' AVENUE SERVIC! DIRICTORY SERVICE DIRECt'ORY HUNTINGTON BEACH ...... A. u""'C ....... .,, • ' .. GUNA B,,.·CH •us. Opportunltt ... 6300_ WESTMINSTER DAILY PILOT A 673-9945 elec bltnl, IUl'lken patio, ._ ·wn u Cerpentering 6590 Gardening 6680
cpta, drpe. ~e. Near .. HIS MEMORIAL PARK -~--------------1 __ ._642--C21 ___ • __
4351 beM:b. Adulta. No peta. ENG J N EE RING • AR-CANDY Mortuary & Cemetery REPAJRS, addition& It EXPERIENCED Gardener ~~-----~month )leatty. IC-3666 CffiI!lC'l'OltAL otc, neat, Complete funeral• MainW!ance ol bldp. $4 * Landacaping • 0 H nup * Wanttd Raponaible Young
WESTCUTF. $300 mo. 2 BR. ch'PS ml ~ 1!0l'HC U&ht-LY ftNlft from $245 per br. 536-0379 Reu.. I: Reliable. 642-4400 Man in mid·twentiea w
2 ba, Dmxe. Po o 1, cl>le Inc. W!rT i.s. 942-2al9. SUPP llVU 11. Ce--"ery loti 6600 '-l--ral •--'--L.o11.-work in Stock Room. -.£....•--'-~.-..-. u.. ,._ __ ... th ,.,., Cement, Concrete -... -· ·-_, lalander Yachts ::· S:iss uuq. nc9UO• ""'" \:'Wi~:1;AiTtu Part or Full Time lndud:~!!!!t Care CONCREI'E. bile, Spanish Painting, PtvmJ>~. ~ 646-743~
""""' 8eMh 4400 OCEANFRONT 2 BR 2 child 148-2130 ~-~eld ~ ~ Ev~ In OM betutftul tile, wroucht iron, ~ A pentry. Reur lk1. lnaured. --------OK Sl95 yrt;,. June l5. Bllns, Modem Oftice-Oranre Co. ~ ..... money m ' place means lea cost. alum, patio roofs. Uc. BankAmericard OK .FURNISHED sex»~ Seubaft. 213: 248-1921 Bank baJlcani. 230 E. 17th ~~ltytn coin open: No traUlc problem1. 547·5m Cal.I "Mike' 64.l-0348
, 2 bath ICDdlo. carpets, St., Colt& Meu. SU-1485 ;m;.-..• · your area. 14801 Beach, Westminster CEMENT work, all types. CALL JOHN M'l-2106 10 yrs
pea. ~t-tna. WeU cared Conne del Mar· 5250 S875 to 13GI CASH REQ'D 5Jl.1725 19.>2421 So job too 1mall. Free eat. exp wallpaperlne & vtnyl Must have references.
BARTENDER
apta. Good location. 1 blk ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;; lndU1trl1I Prop. 6080 High ·net proftt, euy to learn. H. STUn..ICK 548-8615 floorcovering Call 675.0100 5 polnta. $l«S. 1611 Ellil.
B. * tL1nnel Reef * 200'x326' M-1 EXCELLENT wm llllectt. For penonaI U>-Cemetery L... 6418 CUSTOM PATIOS a: Hauling 6730 --------or "2-2835 \D level propertJ tn choice terview llel'>d name, addreSI Block walls. Also concrete Service Station
APARTMENTS area, Good J' l nan 0 in 1 A: ~~~ * ~ CHOICE Cemetery Lots. nwlng I: removal. 842-1010 HAULING + GENERAL SALESMAN 2 lclnn furn, SPECI'ACULAR VIEW available. '84.500 -15% DIST. CO. Green Hllll Memorlal Park. THORYK CX>NCRETE a..EANUP Full time. Good salary t
& •.-.1..-•-r w tedrant/Loc Boat Down A "ood inYestmmt. Call NO JOB TOO SMALL You name lt -I haul It benefit& Exper. ONL y ap--....nwwv a Sllps Available THE. REAL ESTAT!:RS =· ~ ~~ afternoons 54&-21M Free eet. 646--1234/~16 Reu. Big John 6424030 ply. JIM TICE CHEVRON
Utllities IJlcluded. % Bit • 2 Bath Apta. e46-T1T1 546-2313 · · O.EAN Lots, pragea, etc. 2S90 Newport Blvd., C.M. ~~n~o. HB LEASE -or· BUY EARN S'200 AND UP PER SERVICE DlllECTORY Contractort 6620 Tree removal , dump, a~. BUSIN&<!S Expanding. Need ~2914 $420. Mo. a: up -$59.SOO up lndultri1I Rent1I 6090 MON'nl WOR.KlNG 3 HRS Babytittlnt 6550 LICENSED OJntractor. Ad· backhoe, tm, grade. 962-8745 YOWli man1ed mai:i to learn L-------:---::R.en:-'.""".':t~ .25:15 Ocean Blvd., CdM 2400 ICI· ft. $1~ per mo. uo PER WK. 5 excJuaive ven-ditions. Remodeling. Sm SA VE MONEY * Before you carpet and m&111lenance
, -k. mo• .ASn~'!°[ A: 2 BR 613-17!8 -for further lnft> Ii: 220 three _..ue poweor. dint routes anil tor Orange RELIABLE chlld a: Infant Jobi S clalty 673-2129 Ta~ It to the dump call trade. Mu1t be willing to
.. -Herman Trott. ?qr. .,... Count¥ for new and exdtlni catt, I ' a v e "Slllie" or pe · Us! &t&-9188 or 642-5666 work Good future for riitlt bll< bch. All ltnena 6 utila 1lm Placentia Ave. COl'ta machine. Noncompetitive. "Johnnie" witb me. Mature ADD • Remodel • RepaJr peraon. No exper nee. 5(9.
COMPA$ MOTEL Mesa. 642-7263 No tielltng, just collect your woman, 1rg home, encl yd, FrRee1a ·, .':!~ .._· Elnduirtrist. DI~ Ironing 6755 2425
8-11th St .. H.B. 53M1'10 • -QUANSET Bu1ldins approx prallta weekly. S'795 total iJ>-loving care, rel.a. Springdale ... ~:'~ -J-AN-...,..ITO....,,....R---ru-.lh.,-tl-.-,M,..,.1-11-
Rooms -Aipta for R.ent ~ 11XX>'. $65 per mo. vestment beys 1D new •en-EdQ!aer loc. Rataa by wit, n urnn..w• "'~ Ironing Wanted $1. hr. M1.11t be capable cl tak·
. wk. mo. Sn«ls 1 • 2 BR ~ . ort• 56-TlSl dlna madtlnea placed l.n dy or by hr. Call 431--0953 TOM CARNET, Bldt. lS yrs 546-4383 illl chuie Gl w-,. buiJd.
bit bcb. Aft lbwnl A: otila FOR uue. 2500 ICl·ft con-pr t rn • Jocatiom. FINAN· LOVING CARE fer your exp. New oooatr, n:n add, Ing. $2.25 an hour. Write
COMPASS MCYI'EL ON TEN ACRES c:Me tilt up, 9c a SQ-ft. 1340 ONG TO QUALIFIED child In my bocM. lnfant to 1en malnt. ~wk. 673-Z473 Paperhanging full qualillcatlons to P .O.
Uth St., H.B. 53Ml'10 1 • 2 BJt. !'Uni 6 Unfunl Logan Ave., ~ PEOPLE. For further info 3 yrs. 546-lml Additions * Remodeling Painting 6850 Box 1307, COit& Mesa.
RENT a Roomt Furniture
$25 Month ruu. OFl'lON TO BUY
No deOM!t n.a.c.
H.F.R.C.
furniture ltent1l1
517 w. 1.9tb. C.M.. ~1415f
5100
Frplca I Pri/Patiol / Pooll Indust. Space 7411W.17th call 213: 911-24915 or write BABYSITrlNG rQ1 nome by Fred ff. Gerwkk, Uc. SERV .sta Attend, Day sb.llt
Tennis -Contnt'l 8kflt. II Costa Mesa 311()() IQ ft Shoc1 Out Sales Ii: M1i·, week. H. B. 0.1 or evea. 6'73-eOCl * 549-7170 INTERIOR A: ext pa.Jnting. al cle8!1, hi volllme, Teu co
bole Putt/Gr.en. Owner (213) 43+-5082 14515 Ventura B 1 v d • • Phone 342-4056 Prices slu1ied for spring station. MUST have exp &.
8!XI Sea Lane, CdM 644-216ll I========-Sherme.n Oaks, Cal. 91403 BABYSITI'.ING In your home Carpet CINnJng 6625 clean · up. Free est. 30 yr good ref1. Excel 18.1 to rllfht
(MacArthur nr. O>ast Hwy) Lob 6100 CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE by 1 he wee«. You tum exp. Call Ctiuck al )48-5314 man. Contact Bill Gut for ~~~~~~~~ -----------Man or woman to restock tram.-portation. 642-1407 e WALL TO WALL e P.\f'ERRANGING &: PAI N1'· appt. 54&-1757
Huge brand new 2 BR PARTIAL Ocean v l e"': new type coin dispenser • CARPET CLEANING • ING, clean & ren 20 Yr11. MEN wanted for eady a.m.
bit-Ins, dshwlbr, crpt1. C~~~ 1 dtel ..,,~ar.le•~hollcde with b1Jb quality package Irick, Mason-, etc. BIG Dl11C01Jntl 646·3'180 ex. Lor ~f. 642-1322 aft 5 pm dellvt'ry of newrpapen, ap. o ~a.. 0 ••v• ...., · candv producis without ..iv. ·., L•Ut. d drapes a> Narcissus Lo el ---17.. 2o1 o , a• ..,_ .1.6.~" "'"'"T ,... "'"' Palntlnc & prox., 2~ hrs per ay. Musi · v Y u_.. "· tn° up pre~t ""'"'tion. No El-.A I I ~ c '""' ~""""" J W of "A RI S ..1 2 BR _, Uy .. -j-'-"' R ·•t • .....,. -·r ca Pa""rhan...i~... FREE ES-Ive · ..,. · ver, • "' perna """ .,._, e. .. or 1el1Jnr. ~ble person BRICK. Concrete, Carpentry TIMATES•u'5.&.s.34.5i Garden Grov e Fwy. Flreplac:e, n45 "Tlo. M·l 1.01', improved, Trade, can net VERY H I G H Custom Cabinetl. 8 m a 11 EL,ECT!UCIAN, Licensed &: • 847-8979
DeLaney Realty 173-3'770 sell. 548-2'157 aft« 6 p.m. EARNINGS. Raqufru $900 ;obs. OK Free Eat 962~945 b o 11 de d. Smlll jobs, e PAINTING • Interior le -,--~-...,.,,--....,,---
20 to $3500 caah tor Immediate mainten. A: repa1n. ~203 Exterior. Free estimates. MExecund tl•~ .. ~~ktee~ Sant• Ana 56 Cit"'"-G-• 6175 .o11.ir70 Reuooabl.e rates. 646-3015 ° ay wn• ;>A ur.....,, __ ...,... ______ 1 .... ..... 1tart. Write Cw penonal in-Builders -..ii.LIO Newport Harbor .OL T AIRE tervln, stvtnc p b one G1rdenlnt .., INTER ar Ext. PAINTING, Convalescent
REUBEN'S
COOKS ~
Youn9 men In·
terestecl In
growinCJ orCJGn•
ization. Excel-
lent insurance
p I a n & profit
sharln9. Please
apply In person..
between 8 & 4
P.M.
1sss w.-·:
I Adams, ·
Costa Mesa
I r-
Senior
M1inlenance Min
, •
CITY OF
NEWPORT BiACH
Parka Dlvl1ion
$498-~ per month
Excellent benetiU. ~
ElfcelJent b e n e 11 t a. Re-
quires minimum ol 2 1ffrl
experience in ~
retpOnSlble 1 k ii I e d and
aemi·lk:Wed wortr tn COi>
1truct:ion and moJnt'f!ftance
of water and lrrigadcn ~
terns, or a constn.lctioft
trade. Apply tmmedJately
at:
Personnel Office
CITY HALL
3300 Newport Blvd.
Newport Beech
Local manufecturer ha1
immediate openlnp for:
• Electronic
Assemblers
• Wiremen
We ere an ntabll1hed.
commerclel firm with
llberel fringe beneffta.
Only people with at
leut tix month1 O!
perltnce 1hould 1pply
to t
PARAMElllCJ
929 laker Str..t
Costa Meta
~49·2221
Salesmen ( 3)
FULL OR PART '1'lME
~
Direct ales. Hl&hest Piro
commiaaloo. bonus, mecUclll.
profit llhartnc. Leadl bJm.
1abed. Ottr Clll&tmMrS qJ1
us. Car and Ales expa .....
neceua.ry. Aveni--$1<XXI a month, «ftl7 mt11tlt.
CALL Mr. Meaendmlldt
714-526-6616
Collect or Direct
FRY COOK
Apply In penon
between U p.m. :1,
SNACK SHOP
2305 E. eo.t Hwy.
Coron• clel Mw REMODEL • RD>AIRCJ IMMED SERVICE Local FROM $99.SO . Pre....&.I lllterest mrmblr to Int.er-st.a~ Dist. Residential. Commerc. room ANTHONY'S . . Home, ~Superior Ave.,
UNIQUE oewt.Y redecorated Lee 1 BR. 2 BR. Studioe w-" ~""'"""in Rlvft"-Co., lBll Wat KateDa, Suite additons. Reuno fm-303I • ref. FREE est. 548-1627 N""'JJOf1 BMch. &46-17Q; No ...__,enca
-..i ~ -· Hotpolnt bltm refric "" al 221. Anaheim, Callfomla Garden Service INTERVIEW"""' • PART -.,,..... • 2 BR, ............. .._.. "....:.; · ' aide area 5 aa.. of Nav 92»1 646-1941 Plumblnt · 6190 TIME. P•rf~ ......._ for __. NKAaftl!Vf .WW. db"p., frplc. beamt:V cpts, drpe, pvt patio. cocninl tnto fl11J produc:tk>n . ca..,.nterin1 '590 ~ ~· ,..,., .. .,... ---·,
cdltnp, fDcd )Id, pr. •alk ... pool.! F-~~ ~485 next year. Maintained .by luy Now for Summer COM'.PLE'T'E CLEANUP LEAKS! Gu or ... ter e1eo-lege 1tudent age l~27. 2 Muat have dean C.Ufmlk
to btnb. PO A mlrt. Ex· "'"' · ..... ,..... · local l'ellldart. Full pnc• Toy 11"'11 ~ 8a1boa Ille. SCRAM LETS NEW LAWNS trlXllcally located Ullder «-eves. • Sat. lntenlewlnlt drivll!I record. A1'Pl1 tre'Deb quiet snd pvt. Resp <Betwn McFadden A: lit St.) S3S OOO id OK with Eltlbl1sbtd z >'f&n. • 1tn1. monthly ca.re. Pnm-meat, blacktop, rround. sl~le dr\s. JE 4-m YILLOW CAa CQ.
adalU only. mo.~ m:n. tO':t~or more info AGT. m.m Stl-1481 eves. ANSWERS Ina. Land1eapln(. Exp. hor· walls. tbowen, .,., place. ROUTE! AVAILABLE 1!6 E. lBUI St. HARBOR V1lLAS AP'J'S, LlgUfta Beach 5705 p1.,. C9ll K. w. Small tlculturtat. Repaired. Water lines clean-In Oleta M-
2621 Hatbor Blvd·, CM 100 CLIPP oarv• with· ln ... tment Oppw. 6310 Lawn & Y•d edc:Jr~~Ni.osu W8tmlnlter f« bo)'I 1().14 • ROUTE wauc
2 BR Studio Apq. Cpta,X: LUXURY FURNISHED Year Eckhoff & Allee. Inc. NEED IDCJIM1. wm pay ~ ~ ;:i~ Abyu -U.J.a.A BankAmerlcard OK Good Pronta • No SUnda:t 56 e1'0Pt a day $110. a fttlr
hltnl, htd IW1m pool. M llit. BtlCbeJor w/av ._.to llll W. Qaipman Ave. 10% pla9 for SlT.ooo. .-va'™"~·. to all1atntt In a t""--r De1iftf1 M2-f.S2l ~ to .wt. C.W ...,
fee., tr.. prll'1. al\11"1 -"" -"---"'-,,,___ Oallf . "'-"-t ·----'"-"'" rototil. grade. ~ PLUMBING SERVI,..... S Att nd t phone nect!91&J')'· (1 Jlill't
ti Apt .. • -· • _..._ ~..... --&:.M.""Alc:" ~-.... • .., d .._ ....... m11~-m .. ~oo~ "'"" ta e an ' 1 . -•-) -.....__ adults. ""'· 'P'~ OUD rvf!Jff Apt. 541-81, EvO*'tmdl 53S-.59T1 Madie Davia Realtor '"' 1'""". ~ ... ' M 0 WING , Ed 1 l n l , REPAIRS """'m c.M ewer 21. light mech exper, t me operunp ....., ' c._
LUXURJOUI V1ifw 2 Bil. 1'4 .._ $150 mo up. '42·7000 looldng rklicu~ 111 the vacal&wn. Cftl'l c!Hnup. 642·3:UI Union StaUon, m s~klt. ~l7'J8 ~lD •·m. • f·t
b&, aJJ tlec, CIJ't$. .. GE ~ FASHION dlla )'t.W," HauUni:. NB ..:p~.m.="""'~~~==:---:-:o
kltcbln. color ut .... en-ACN919 6200 Mort-T 0 'a 6345 ! NO JOB TOO SMALL! Odd .icJt>I. * ~ s..f ne 6960 YOUNG Nan (21,.35) .....S. d()Nd ..,..,., nr -$135 5707 r:r+' • • ~t • lndultrlal Com-~ " LITE A Aliff Ins oppcr In who 11 tnter-.4 In penn.
adalt:I. LllfUM N..... JO SD1lf ESTATE OWNER/Act. $12,000 lat T.D. mercl.lll . Ma Int en an c e ~P~O::~ ed~~ ~~: Al,.retlont-642-!845 ~a i ,u n a 1 r M · T ;rt~: mechanloll ~
uo E. Db. CJI. C11J'E 1 BR pueled, carpets. 20~ Dia. Well secuted R.etlf.lr 11nd Remo II e I. estimate. NMt, eccurate, ~ yn. exp. 837~~mm. r. potttSon In mame Seid ·.
• aer•,. --Z::::: • drafel, DIW dlwe, Nfl11, 2 t /3 ltMf 547-7.at t'l54!44 Ftftf,ooable. Uc, banded, ln· * Olil --1911 * 8an G.tdel V&Jle7 -.; ..,..nu ... • u..., ........, ~ .......__... Jt\.Kl.I __. TILE, C.remJc t974 MATURE Man for~ tlmc XInt ~ w/f.,... lt/C' .-.t
WHlGpoot Qmlt .._ IMOlmo. ,.alo. '*"-~ l\lm•. JAPANESE GARDENER ln l'tnall f&ln11... O'Mef1 ,.,.. • ·-· -MoneyW.ltfM 6350 e •19Sl or 6040&C e ,.._._. ____ .._ ..., __ --., M ..., lndlnlual. A~ 8alC Jll. VlriMT 1118\ ..........,....,..... .,, .... lUUt1Ulo * Vene. ti» 'nl.t an* 1tore. a.. Mt. Adami at S.lboa talad, Cal. ibi, Dllm. .-.Cl 'lk 1" Dene ~ l740 AUllll "'"" 'lllVATI MONIY CARPENTERINO t Roof-Oood re&.. ~MS-Ta CUit. wan. IDltaJU repatn. 3347 .E. O:>eat ff-,., 01M J'UU.,.=..,......,,,TIME=,_,..-.__ ... '*' ~ ._.... ,_ m 1/a ACBJ:S oammtrdal ·J'Qll q . AD t1P8 e AD wor1t MPERT Je,._ Oftde. No _. "° llmD. Plufa' 2 Strvb Statlao Mn Part ed meebaale. A &DOii •
Pl a.ta:I •AaOUS t B1t. t &\ 2 --9 (04) • ... ~ ht 6 Ind ~ pnnteed. S3f"7'8 e Lftdlc'q 0-.nap ..... »-tcb. ~ 1 how or time. APPb' La Ion a ~ 1w a. rtlllt ~
; J .. t .... ..,.,., -............ crl*. ~ • luta .... ~ S1500 ' up.~ .... REPAIR.I * A.LTIMTIONS -..0.. "KAcr' NT.am ,.,.sr. NT-11ST/l4U308 Chevron SC.Uon tof .. Olut H labor •• ID* .... ~ Mb&, % cw ... ; .,_, bli.Jb nJ!lll/O'left. tlil. .,c:.. .,,.._ tra.Utr SUI .. "2-Jf Jlr ..,aa CABJNE'I'S. Al'l6 .... job. 6it It 1:41e !Awn JOU & IM'LOYMINT JftrJ. La&una a.di AJ'a R ! o la 11 e I d, 1U10 ....._ .,.. ...... l.w Adlita •• SUI ... Mm pd « •ocw -.-dal OD aedl 11000 bonw-9. SS Y'rl axper. 5tMT13 lla11mnoct. Uct:nMd. U.OYD'S NURSERY CO. Paliladee Rd., lta ADa
M1:M V ... I ...., Aloulr. !>.-po ID l . CJg. « ,_ 1Dr flrtart tao Jack Sl1llll 0>. ~ lM e ~ e ~ e Mt--• MH570 aft 4 PM .... W......., Min 7000 Wanttd ~ nu r Io r Y * T...,.._ 1Ut9
dee. -...... ..... 1lf e561ll a.It In ..... """ Bola J.m "· ~. u • BIMne • AJbftdum • J CL,._ Mlnman J'ull time, can Top ~. lllUJ tr
... edlltl. 1125. MH35T "90 -'"-fD111 ~ tntio 4o 54S t•t •JftlN e JlfPIJn e R.-et -.a:s .:.a=.,.. a_... MAH -G 1ft. old • 11 1"1-&49-7441 100 q\&l.lifJ Elpmo. °*· lii~-1;.i;;in;iiL"""Ciii.-iiabOt.o ........ w....... i.no btrd. .... Unc ltul> B\JSJ.lft ~ .. °Ir• 8wll .... .... .... • toSltf aft I • ~ ~ ,,_ ~ J'RY COOK. 2 "' CXI*'· For ~ .. ......_,,
.._ a ntttc. fl\ • • w.um:o June a CID ksla 1*t at Pl"CIPd'IY· Ample -.. n. DAD..? l'l1Dl' _. Macdm ..-t ~.1111 • .ilhk!ii diiDiMiNG all Exctptionalb' ....a 1tart 12. hf, ~ CGaee JAml"OR. 1 ~
JMa P!, CM eo-un tmD -... S Bil a.a.., .... ..,t7. nrt.e "1 m1 0 181" ..... In• DAILY f'flD'l a .Ml ,_. OllDIP. ~ d I y tr I SfW baQaloand .. 512 W. 1Ht; CK. W'lft. Gil.,,, .... a
Mlle V .. .,_ Cd.JI. G""" .... cm... W ..... ._.. Am, llm m1917 ...... .-n, 1.-_.. "°"' -m.·at aft y ,_ Ji1W '=00 P.X. 9D-«a ....,.......; Diiilll aiiili 8clllK•Dll)'Pu.e ' a _.. .... x... ,.,_...., ,.._...., taa11.. _D11trt __ u _______ , --------_;-., _______ _
>
··---·:-..................... -
..... I • .. . . . .. . .,, . ,,.
J! IWLY PILOT' T .... ~ 2J, 1"8
IOIS & EMPLOYMINT JOas a RMPLOYMIHT JOIS A IMPLOYMI NT JOBS ' IMP\.OYMINT JOU ' IMPLOYMfNT
Help Wint.cf '-talo W•ntecl. M." 7100 Help Want..t. M.a 7100 Wemen 7400 Jobe Mer., Wom. 7500 J1... Mia, Wom. 7500
• Engi ne lathe
M1chinists
• T unet Lathe
Machinists
e Welders
e Cabinet
Sett en
Mobil• Hom.
HUGHES
Newport leach
MS MYenl openl"IS for
FAR WEST
SERVICES INC
• Milling
Machinist
Experi.n~
Excellent opportunity
-Apply-
fJPlORfR
MOS
Assemblers
& Bonders
Hiring
• Drill Press Open
MOTORHOME CORP. •Busboys
• l ool Grinder
.COOO C1mpus Drive
Newport B11ch
BORED&
TIRED
l'ICJ>t'rlf'f!ced ill photc>-rl"-
1111 tf'Chn1ques, KP R
mask al1~rn1. ttcluna.
pho<o-rf'Sist apph('11Uons,
or bondin11 •~ 11pphl'd to
111"m1-('t)O(fuetor proct!lr
~s
• Waitresses
Optorun;s on day
Md night du.Its • Hostesses
J. C. CARTER CO.
ol .,. atcbing TV tVl'S betwttn
6 &, IO P . M Ir \\oOUld ratbtr HUGHES
wort< &. f'&TTI • w~kly sa1.. Aircraft Company • Dishwashers
a.ry of
671 W. 17th St.
Cotti Me..
541-3421
$72 .SO 500 Superior Av•nue
N•wport S.1ch, C1llf. Apply in penoe
'lr AbMlmS 774-2020 from I 1.m. to 10 p.m.
An equal opponunity
employer
Traintt& Sall'S
AAA· 1 COMPANY
Flbergla11 Molder
Skilltd Minimum 3 }'('&rs
PXpf'riPn<'t' Familiar with
harv1 lay-up.
Newport B~ts
19l!l PlaN'f!na. Costa ~e~a
Equal opportunity employtr
-M&,F
SECRETARY
REUBEN E. LEE
RESTAURANT
NOW HIRING
Duf to a planntd summer
expansion program the Ana·
beun DiVISlOTI of our ln·
temational Jirm now has
need of several ambitious
young men 18-26, a mJni.
mum or blg.h school tduca·
tioo. Exciting job oppor·
tunities for the young man
who wishl's to~ trained in
Personnel Dtttctlon, Office
Procttdurn and Sales Pro-
motion.
• hi A~•mbltrs
• Ol.rpenttrs
• Bondrr
• Olbul1>t ~akPr
In f'1t>lrf Salts ~p.trt
mt'nt Sf.I( sL1rtPr. vrr-
!t-illlt'. good shorthand
and ryping slnl15. AP·
PLY In PERSON ONLY.
151 E. Pacific Coat Highway
Newport Beldt
Jenffn M1rine Corp.
235 F'i11<:her. Co.,ta Mtsa Whittaker Corp.
BOYS 10 -14
Good routes! • Good proflt!
Nermco Mlterl1l1 Div. Help W•nted
Wom•n
BALBOA PENINSULA
DAILY PILOT
600 Victori1 Str .. t
Cost• Meu
• 642~. • An t'(Jual opportunity
• MECHANTC, l'XJ)f'r. Cattta pmployer
Mesa Auto Works. 2066 -----'---'-----
Plarenti11. Costa Mesa Cashier Hostess
Typist or
StenOCJrapher
00
EXPERIENCED
NCR 3300 Mach Opr.
!or 11'1le Department Store
call: Mn. Dillard for 11ppt.
lTI4) 531~ be(ol'(! noon
531~ ahemoons
$540 per mo. ulary
No experience is necessary
due to the on-the-job train-
lng at company experuie.
Qualified men will reoceive
the1r tint promotion in
June. Only apply if )'OU can
ST ART WORK THIS
WEEK.
Agencies, Women 7300 Neer appearinir. 18-40 no
PBX/Rec:pt. exper necessary.
Apply in perr.on·
Bob's Big Boy
154 E. 17th St.. CM
What's more lmpartant! ·the
work. the su1Toondings, the
people~ H they ALL att,
then look into this perman-
1>nl JOb With good pay jn. ---------
\IOJving a vantlY of inlt~· Jobe Men, Wo~ 7500
For Immediate considera·
tion call s:JS.1183 9 A.M. to
2 P.M.
loe1I m1nuf1cturer
h11 imrnedlatt open·
Ing• for:
-Lay-out Men
-Brake
Operator
Capable of doing O'llT\ ~t
We .,. an ett1bll1hed
commercial firm with
llber•I fringe benefits.
ONLY EXPERI ·
E N C E D PEOPLE
should appfy to
PARAMRRICS
929 Baker St.
Cost• M ...
549-2221
Sheet Metal Men
Experl,.nced \n aluminum
fabncation. Must be able to
make Ol"'ll BttUp8 on all
sheet m e t a I equipment.
Must ba•t own tool.I. Only
txperlenced opmitol'1 need
apply.
R1dl1tronics, Inc.
18842 Ttlltr Ave.
Newpnrt Beach 1133-noo
An eqwtl opportunity
employPr
AQUA-AIRE
Most unusual position for an
attractivt penon "'ith r!'-
cent con! board exper. No
typing, u/JO. Hl"Bvy public---------
contract. S400. <tee reim·
bul"lled I ADVERTISING
Busy agency needs pa.rt-lime
NEWPORT Ctr! F'riday. ~ust ~. han-
Personntl Agency die phonts well. bf. adapt-
833 Dover Drivl', N B. 11blf' Hoon ~2. 3 days. Call
6'42-3870 for app't. between 9 Ii 10
Secy/fr ore. 00/60 .. to S450 AM. ONLY
Bkpr thru GIL, EDP .• $450 e 546-4890 e
~"' a: Tclleni .... S37S SEAMSTRESSES
ARGUS EMPLOYMENT Full t1mt: s day wtek Ex-
CONSULTANT AGENCY ~· single need.II' & .bbnd 204.' Wl'Stclitf. NB ~-7796 mtcb operators. Good wag·
1624 E I.7th, SA. !l47.fi.136 I'S le fringe benelit1. Apply: l~ Ctl's ntlAnhm ~11 !RIO Monrovia, Costa Ml'SI
SCREENED "'SALESWOMAN
~:..; for s ma I I womtn'11
C1rnrs for Secys. & ~ruwtar shop in O>rona
Bkpra. In Or•nge County del "'1ar. Full time. perm
642-7 484 54&.fi020 Good oppty ! 673-nS.1
Sc:rttnl'd PttsoMel Agency LVN :i.u SHIFT
901 Dover Dr., Newport Bch NrW1>0rt H a r b or Con·
RUTH RYAN AGENCY vate~ent Homr. 1;, 5 5
Exec Secy/fee paid/to t6fiO Superior Ave .. N e w port
Girl Frlday/ftt ........ S400 Beach. 64(H765
Receptiorustlfee .... to S.350 LADY to care tor my wile
MANY OTHER LJSTTNGS for 3 mos upon return from
1793 N l"WJlOrt. C M. 6464854 hospital ~ ay 1. Salary open
17931 ~ch, H B. 847-9£117 ~-1326 or p 98. DaUy
1042 w. 17ttl, S A. 547-&m ;:;P";;1l:":'ot~-=-=----
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiii,;; GIRLS 18 or ovtr for
~ Betty Bruce at
mi~j Gxec
Agency for Career Girls
410 W. Coast Hwy , N .8 .
By appoint. 646-393'.I
waltreeeet1 Apply In J>l't"SOO.
Swiss Olalet. 414 N .
NewipoTI 81. N.N.
BARMAIDS ..•.
..• and GO.GO
DANCERS
SJOO J)l'r week
638-5483 or 6.-0-9763
Hel p W•nttd, • B E A u Ty OPERATOR Women with followiniz. 7011. com-________ 7400_ mission to start. Costa Mtsa
EXPER.JENCT.D Barmaid busy salon. 642-8641
To 35 yrs of age V,egas DO NUT Shop Work. No rxp
Room 96S W. 19th. CM nf'C. 25-45 Early 11 m i.ti1ft
Saleshuiy r-q>eriencrd Mr Donut, 135 E. 17th St.
f nr Jewelry storP 1n =C:::~==--:------C"n~ta Meaa. 548-3402 TENDER Lovin1t carp tor :i
HOt'SEKEEPER. live In. t yr old girl. schl llltl' hoy
child. Lido Isle. Call 9 to ;, H~kpll. Live in or out
517 C\m 495-4864 after 6 pm
BEAUTY Operator. Exper .. NEED :? f'ullercttes. Can
llccl\Rd, to work 10 wig Pam S4. hour, WI' tnln ~bop CaU 642-""00 H B. Mn.. G reen b tr g
• --Vl 84:!~:i:>~
ing duties. induding recep.
tlorust ... with lln establish-
ed firm ... ottering all mod-
em benehti1 ... In a bright.
chttrtul office . • • among
friendly young men It wo-
men.
Household Finance
15 Point Sbpg Center)
18621 Main St .. HB
EXPERfENCED
CREDIT CHECKER
UNITED CALIFORNIA
IANK
3029 Harbor Blvci.
Cotta Mesa
546-2033
All equal opportwuty
employer
Applicants considered on
merit regardless of t"80@,
religious c::rttd. color. na·
tionaJ origin or ancestry.
BUS GIRL
n to 35 )'t'llrs. Full or part
time. Plrasant atmosphere.
good working conditions.
Sl.60 Pf.'r hour
Richard's
lido Coffee Shop
3"33 Via Lido
Newport BH ch
lnlervtl'\\s 9-11 a.m. Ofhce.
Richard's Lido Mari<tt.
Experienced
Tellers
NCR Operator
Bank of America
NEW Ol'vlSION or EASY'-
ER:"ll MFG FTRM NOW
HrRING, WE NEED 2'l
\JEN TO TRAIN IN ALL
DEPTS. NO EXPERIENCE
f'JECESS.. AS WE TRAIN.
ST A.RTtNG SAL.ARY
HSEKPR. mother!~ twn. :I ;:;;;=:;-;----,-....,...,...--
rhldrn. ~" l, 6, and ll. NURSE for 1 cluld. full or 1016 Irvine
CdM. R.e!.s. 673-8213 part tim~. st111r a11r. "X'P A Newport S.ech
------__ refs. Write Box ~·91 Dally E.XPER. SALES PERSON Pilnr. An equal opportunity
wanted 22 to 115 yni, ref& re. -.,~.-:-------rmployer
$495 PER MO.
FOR INTERVIEW CALL
MON. & TUES. qulrf'd f>.l&-2$42 SS day to do nn11\ln11: Just ~!l!!"lm!!!!!--"!!!111!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ stay wtth Grandpa whllt l
PRIME arf'1 Fullt'rrtte \f!fl' \\ork. No wktnda liun-
H B . f' V. Wiii tr.un. Mn tington Beach. tt17'"'898
HOUSEMAN ~cken:iy, 962-5244. 0 SEA~STRF.SS, dry clean·
Fun fune. Exper p~ferMJ. 0.ntal S•cret•ry ing experience Also """d
Westminster Newport Beach ~S602 COUNTER GIRL 40 hour
Community Hoapltal .ReUablt sitter wanttd wrtk. Ml-95."'iO 111-noonl
893-4041 Ext. 331 altemoona It n't'llings. HOUSEKEEPER. rlCJI nnly
Equal opportunity mipln}'ft • 847-43U • live In. 1'1'!& rpq. 2 adults. 2
POUSR A DETAIL MA.~ HSEKPR • ComP&nioo ror I " " ~ 8 g er ' · Lido Ille
5-47-0601
Cook-Baker
Exi>enenetd !or vacation
!'(!her.
Coot11ct Ml"ll. Kuzma
Westmln~ter Hospital
200 llo!pitat ctrcle
Westmlnattr
~1. Ext 3.'lO
ANO widl)Wtr. 4.5. wlbab) OK 673'-&>43 PARTS CC>Ul'JTE'RMAi"f 847-2429 wiittivE;;-'_l;;;;N;-;h:-::;9lc:-pr"""7"to_r_11r-.. -,or-9 BOOKKEEPER
DEAN LEWIS RELIABLE Baby~ittl'r Own mo old ltlrl. \1n~1 bf A ClllW'r lady, Z>-40, to band·
1966 Harbor. C.M. trans 3. JO 10 6· :J0-5 dys rrhahle A. have n>I~. \1om-IP various 1crountin1t phu.
6t6-9303 541HlG7 111"' 4!M-8.1Qi L. Wotlr I'll of 111 inttrelttna tield.
G.rtf« tndu.trl.. FULL. ~ Hs.-kpr C.dM DRAPERY work toom tit-Ip Apply tn Pl'MJOn. ~ maddn Rda n-q. Lue ~. Own ~. Mtl MolTilon Ora-HENDERSON'S·
Id wttb ewa .: = tram. m -0988 llerlet, 1651 PlaC'l".ntia A\le. 1877 Ha.rtior Blvd.
JIOllUon. 9H W. 17th St., W~ Exper. Dinnen. C.M. Coctll Nea, °'1U.
a.a M-. fG.DJ6 u1r for Hoetts I: <i.lbltt. CloHd * 1'fLEPHONE SA.1..D SEWING M.actiine Open. 8eftmd Ga1Ja or Roa Mon. 83S-'121T ~ co1mtd.SC... IAlary If Sporuwur, llDtnt tnlz>Mt
Dmnlmn. WOMEN e&nt '50. 15 boun :i craalUy. Elc:per ant)'. Foe being lea'Pt. App\)' 290'1 So. •·~· lttate Sate.man Wttk u a P'Q.lle-ette. Mra. ~ pll 546-'1041 OU St .• Santa Ana. 7:30 to
1809kln't 10ll bt .Uq tn Brown. IG·lm. 8ABnrrt'ER for 1 yr. old ::-3-:30 ______ _
Hmtttwtmi Bdch" BABY'SMTD\. Room IUld Mom A attmioon Own • • ~DIQ FAm ss.ssiij,
vm.,. Real r.mre m1 + "'11'11 .1ary. ace ~ ~· 30 ..... eX1n lQOM.f "Y lhowlnC • 5414MD atta. )40..~ I · .-." WATKINS PROt>UCTS In
llllV aa. Mllld. Plttme. • MOTEL MAID • ;,rr:.:. •o:r ~p,!7. ~ U:.,1~ ~ .~·
IDr llllltlt 6 wbda.. PAln'·TIM'E m-4521 CM. ~192
.. -O..t ... •JllPt. RESP. Motbtr'a JI... OI • WOMAN to l!Yf In IDd Bakery s. ......... "-
ltlldent, Pvt nn. bit. p,bone.J ~ tor co av 111t1 I n 1 H=.c~ ~
..... -.. ~ ~t Lido. •~139 wom.ao H. a. eau ao-m2 2'lll l'llctntla, eo.aa M•
•
.. -________ __....
Inspector
(leceiYing)
Inspection of !JDlll ma-
chined, mo Id t d lllld
•tamped parts. Must be
able to Wl4!! micrometers.
callpen1. Ability to use
optical comparator desir·
abie. Knowledge ol ma·
dune diop practJces or
madune shop experience
helpful. Must be hi1th
school 11'adu1tt. capable
o( belni tnined to under-
11.and and Ulll' modem
spa~ age IJld alrcnUt
quality control procedur-
es.
Apply Personnel Dept.
Staco, Inc.
11 39 Biker St.
Cost1 M ...
549-3041
An l'QURI opportunity
tmployer
J. W. Robinson
H11 openlntt for:
Salespenons
-Womens shoes
-Mens furnlshintt
-Mens clothlnt
Full time
Excellent a..n.flts.
Apply Penonnel
llM, Mon. thru Fri.
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
An equal opportUnlty
tmployer
Hrs 8: :l().5 pm Moo-"1
Can bf. ll very lucratfve
position ftW" operienced
Pt'Opl('.
Call 642-4.535. I: 30 to 5 pm
R HI Est ... S1S.men
and Sa.....,,_
New llctneee'a .telcom•
We tr'Ul
[)ynRmir ~e new
brudt attke
Dnw1 a1r1but Cooarniuion
11 you quel.lty
RK'hMdloa/Pvm'll
Realty l1S-40.1.t
MEN A WoaM'1I to ~ln:alate
popul11r petWon. Mllft be ~tmd vote-~ °"8,.e
County, Good .,.,. .......
II 1905 £,. lTdl SL. Room
2U. Santa -" .... 13M336. mel7
-.. -..... -.. ,,
JOIS & IMPlOYIMNT JOU & IMP\.OYMINT MIRCHANDISI ,01 Mf RCHANDISI Fo.
SAi.i AHO TRADI SALi AND Tu.a. ~ "-& J .......... 7500 ..... -..;.;:;.;.-+:,;... w.... 1sso ' ,Ufftitv,. eooo Pia,_ a ~-"'° --·--Eleltro-FUINl'IURE PIA~JJ:.GAN p, ' a.Nmed from Yes, we·,.. havlDC • •'Sd-twmier MecL11·1eal .., ... ,. stud• In"•~. noar mo6, • s,.niah Medfferranun el•. &how modck. ....... tn.j
ALL NEW of piUOI 6 OtP111 will SQ Personnel • •"·-.-•,,lers . Mut-t s.cnt1c.e S6l5 •t 1ow. i.ow pricm. WHY •N-•-WAS ~tG. $1691. DON'T YOU shop w Ware
A ITEMS AS FOLLOWS: you tKlyT "gency • UftlHy C'iOr&toUI, n. Spani.sb aa wARD·s BALDWIN ST'UDlo
alld Ma t c b Ing ChaJr. 1801 Newport. CM ~
I Oper. CUilom q u I It e d with * PIANOS 6 ORGANS * 445 . 17tll St. · f carved wood trim. R. to tL •Largest stock in So. cam. ,. ___ ._.__ s.vm. Cl.rYed velvet aola, * 20~-40~ oU.P~ pt&oas ~Tiii 1WW91111 Ex,.,.lence.4 ..,fy. bnvy Datte oak end tab.18 llXKI rolb to cboole from 646-0531 Computer Aaaembly. and matd\inl' cocktaJI ta· * Terma. Tenns ·Terms*
1104 E. 17th St.
~
Santa Ana
547-9721
FEMALE
.... lllk~
$500.
Mature w/ contract exp.
WW take over used car
desk.
Credit C~
to $15. wk,
Ftt pa.id. Will work for
bank. 6 MOI. experience.
.. ,,i ,....., $400
Utt. accurate typll\i, de·
pendablt shorthand.
G ..... Office
$100 w ...
Ag 35 up. Will be doinc
Sl'CTl'tariaJ, billing ' U •
sl!tant bkkpr. Type 45,
lile shrthnd.
h1Yokt Clerk
$2.25 lw.
Part time. Costa Mesa
area. 4 Hrs. cWly. Will
work Into full tlmf'. Ute
typing. Experienced.
Stat Typist t9 $400
:'liewJ>Ort area. 20 or ear·
Jy 30s. Type 50 accurate·
ly. Lots of figures.
cterk Typist •
to $400. Type 50-60
L .... Sect'y $500
ftt neirotiable. Shrthd
100, type 70. One year
C&lll. law experitnce.
C...tNct Secty
$450.
Ace 25 to 35. Shorthand
80. type 60.
MALE
to $3.JO lw.
Slrofli background. pro·
ductlon machinilt. Agt
30-40.
llectrettla
s.,.m.a ..
tr.. $145. wti
Fee nt'lotiable. 3 Years
line aupervllfon experl·
tnce.
M.&et....c• Med
to $3..25 .....
Heavy experlenct re-
building 6 mtintenan~
lnduatrial machinery.
Own tools.
Dr_,._. .. MOO
2 Yeus mln. experience.
roof, trust dealp A lay·
out.
_.... ....
Tea .Jr. t9 $121
1~ peld. 2 Y.an eol.lep
w/heaV)' ~ Sharp.
~e to 30, Military com·
plf'~.
.,... Ca.ti
$Z.M lw
20 to 25, Hlsth School
MU1l&r1 complete. Some
b'Jlln1.
= ......... ..
--. I .... ,,... ..
. WO f& JOIS
-APPLY-
M1rshlll
ble. I Piece Kini siZ.e Med-cub for your piano er trade
lternnea OM pene.l1ed (nl1ld piano for new IPinet
Mdroom IUll• witb IUll field's Wboleule Plano Co.
Kina size boX eprlnp Ir 12072 Broo1cburat at Claapm&n
mattrra. Lvi~ Spanilb d~ Garden Gl'1)ve <n·fl es.mo cor d1nin& room. Gold leaf _ Communiutlons Span.lab table lamps. Hang-ORGANS It PIANOS
1111 twas aamos. etc.. etc Hammond M • 100 • p S 11 e t,
Each pfece can tit pw-cbu. used. ooly $895; al8o G8eli 2230 S. Anne St.
S.nta Ana, Calif.
AA equal opportunltY
ed l.odividua.l.ly. Ba.ldwin, Conn, Low u y,
Terma availablt h'om $395. L o t • of med
employer Newcomen to Calif. erands, splnttt 6 CDOI01e
Credit approved Immediately pianos.
-------R & D FURNITURE ~!n~ ~
J. W. Robinson lM4 :V~ ~V.~i ~.M. PIANOS & ORGANS
Sat a: SUn 'til 6 ALL MAJOR BRANDS
h• openlnp fo r:
e Salad Maker e lus Girf e lus loy
33' Ow•nt 8ri1•ntine
1967 Model • still ~r war-
ranty • fiberi:Iua • ny
brid&e • dual control., -TIS
• ia.5 • loltded w/extras •
RSkln~ S26. COO. 5.i>J67S or
~J9
NEW A USEIJ
W AWCH'S-MANmNG'S
MUSIC CITY
3400 So. BristOI
So. Coast Pl&Z*
540-Zl&.5
e Pot Washer
P•rmanent poslt•on•
Excellent benefit.
BF.AUTIFUL 5· Baby Grand
Jllcob Doll It Sons, Walnut
HYWD.-WKFLO. H d rock $550 ~ll 1.m. 2-4 p.m.
mple. drp. leaf tbl.. 6 S45-5250
chalr1. tl25· 2 Step-tbles &: =========-1
rnd. drp. le.al coffee Ible.. Radio 8200 • .u $85; 673-4356 Apply Personnel
1~ Mon tbru Fri
Fashion lsl1nd
Newport leach
All eqt.-1 opportwuty
employer
RMERA s· 1ob. bed. never LAYFAYATTE Mo bil 23
wsed; C.0.'t $310 aeU $225. ch&n ntl C. s. radj& with
Evn 642-6869 M/2 mike. C.0.1 oveor Sl73
new. In ExceJ.:lent condition
---------21" MAPl..E CX>NSL. TV $26 MALLIE'S WIG It BEAUTY Tbln Une 17'' port TV SZ7:
SALON desires competent 21" ~nllh Lo-boy cons $40;
hair ·styU1t1 who wi.atl otflcf!' det.1<. relin S 3 5 ;
employ In newly d~. salon R.!trig dbl dr, Crzr top. $50.
w/aU the latnt equip. Chst drws S9. LOTS MORE!
Comr.t &: I or l'J&r. . . 1550 Superior t rear I C.M.
comm on hair goods sale. 646-9188. 64.2~.
Followin~ dl'llred. 543-3446 PATIO Furn.. chest. util e SALES • tables. frame Ir: mattress
Part or tull Urne; age 25 or books. toys etc. 842·8700
ovtt. Earn S10 to $105. or =========
more, per week in spare Furniture Auction 8025
time. No competition! Jim -----··--
Smith 847~. 9 AM to 4:30
P.M.
MEN Ir women to circulate
popular petition. M111t be
reg1,ttr!d voter ot Oran~e
County. Good P&Y· Inquire
at 1905 E. 17th St.. Room
Zl2, Santa Ana or p h o n t
835-6336. 89'l""581
TEACH ER--""S--
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
Phone Mn. Hobkirk
83!M207 or 83.')..40ll4
EXPER Fry cook. Fu11time
full.yr. 7 am-3:30 pm Ben-
ton's Col.fee Shop 133 S
Coast Hy. Laguna
School .. lnstructlon 7600
IBM KEYPUNCH
360 PROGRAMMING
INDUS. DRAFTING
GROC. CHECKING
'TRONIC ASSEMBLY
PBX/TYP
West Coast
Trade A Businus Schools
Division of
Computtna It Softwatt lnc.
Hunttniton Beach
Furniture •••
••• Appliances
Color TV's &
Stereos
AUCTION
Wednesday -1 p.m.
INSPECT ANYTIME
9 A.M. · 9 P.M.
Always a
TREMENDOUS
SELECTION
of TOP 9uafity
New & Used
Furniture & Appli1nces
WJLUS CLAR.K'S
AOK co~TON GALLERY
n22
Gerd•n Grove Blvd.
1~ Blk West of Beach Blvd.
at the Garden Grove Frwy.
App~lancu 8100
RENT OR BUY 536-8885 New au~;~~ waabtr
12027 Garden Gr. BJ., G.G. COLOR KlNG TV
"Better LMng thnJ OPEN 7 DAYS
Education" 540-7800 ------------= -----FOR WJ\SHEns S29 !Ki: dryPrs
*reterii l Trtinlnt Sl:I. f tl'1'7N's STJ: Relrla ..
:\TI'F.ND TllF: cop:xortnne Ii Avoc ; Gu11r
Mott Modern Up-to-Date ~'l-tU.n _______ _
BUSINESS COLUXit: 111 I.hr MAYTAG I?'"~ "R...ber/dryer
Southland. Tilt school ofl c"Omlxl.. xlnl col'ld. Cop.
Prog:ramm('d Learnilllt wilh rit"rt:>n(' SIOO. IH7-8115
the ''llnblblna llChOOl" touch 1 --
Complete Secretarial -,Antlqu.s 1110
Bruabup -rBM Keypunch --
Start any Monda.y-~enlng 4 CAPTAl'NS cl\l\irs $3,; ra . cla~ aJsu. rlwH loonfte Sl50. walnut
POLLY PRIEST ~ S40. 61~~127
Sacrifice S10. 50-4622 alt
7.
Televlaion 8205
••• ~. Jll.• RtNT OR IUT CeLeR
TV
FREE
1 Year .••
Parts & Labor
$1 M•.
No Dep~sit
Rent With
Option to Buy
521-7555 I • ...... ='
RENT
COLOR TV
S9 MONTH
Rental can apply to pun:nase
ORDER BY PHONE
523-3651
9 to 9:JO · 7 DAYS
RCA COLOR TV
CUsed) $1501
BIG 267" SCREEN
Fully Gu1nntMd
1177 H•rbor Blvd., C.M.
Open tll 9 p.m.
HI-Fl & Stereo 1210
l~ SOLID State Wpttd
Stereo. Beautil'lll c:oode.
Lf.ft on layaway. Ply balan·
ce of S79.35 oc small
payml'nts. Cttd11 Dept.,
~7289, Anllhtim
T1pe R•corden 1220
ROBERTS CAKAI) 7 7 0
Crossfield stereo. E a T
phoner. incl. Xlnt cond. $250·
61~93 alt 5.
Sportint Goods 1500 BU~ COLLEGE 325 N. Ntwp0rt 81 .. N.B. S.Wlnt Machines 8l20 FOR Sale \!en's Spaul<llna
___ Pbone __ s..m3_.,..-,__ 1967 SJNGER COOIOle. Local got! clubs. 6 !l'<inr., 3 Woodl·.
un:rtME Gitt · OtUcoat 10 Serviceman leaving t h e .:S=73-l=37'1:::~======
leSIOCI TY'Pfn& School 173 Dcl area. Assume peymcnts ot
MW CM. 541-Zi9 Mm.·Wed. n .75 week OC' S39.15 ca1h.M -;i;sc.;;;;ll;•neo:;;us;:;;;;;;;;;"°°;;;;;
ZiitUll:I. b u t t o n h o 1 e • •
MlllCHANDIH FOlt ovucaats. blind stJtcbes. POOL TABLES
,,, 1961 BRUNSWlCK SALi ANO TRADE automatic bobbin •tnder.
"touch • o • matic" e t c. ,,, AMF ,,, TRIANCLE
Furniture IOOO without attachments. 111 Slate from $369
Brunswick $329 value ••
ONLY $239.a SPANISH months guarantee. C I l1
anytime f« info, 523--0975.
From Mft. Showroom lllS'f Stnier -due to divorce
SAMPLES -automatic Zi&Zas Sewtng
100"" FJNANCl'NG
SECARD POOL
LM nt lloom S.t Machine In antique wtllte 323 s. Main, Ol'anp
5.12-1992 1 ONLY! Oal wocd-tumed cab\Mt. Buttonholes. aver-
arms. ~ s.349. NOW SJ.99, cam tk:. without attach-!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
S.Pc Dinette s.t menu. AlllMDe 7 payment• * AUCnON * 1 ONl.Y. OU.top benlOl'I of S6.83 or $41.50 cuh. Cun-u
men, tablt w/4 WTOU .. "t antl'l' stlll OR. Call alter you •Ill ult or ba1 *'' 5 30 ~ f!vt Wind)' a try IJ'Oll'I ct.ln. bl.tell or •voe> : • · Aoct!ons Ftkiay 7 PA
do. $9.$5. ==::-::~===== u.r_.J ' A • 8 5-Pc a..lreom Set Music.al Ind. 112.S n 1nvy ' udion em
l'loar asplt -ONLY \. n:HDER Bttnman •-Behllld l'uny'a Bids. lht1
Ulftt oak. Res s:nt.15, l'40W bus su.lt.ar 1"llmtr •• ~ Newport. CM ......
ONLY SlCUS! Glblafl ~ tooe All ar' $$ CASH SS * S1oclt on band ONl.Y. new 873-«9 . . We ...... ft .... -
NO DOWl'f PAna:NT -==·====== rv ...._ 11&• • • •.-.1.a.--I Furnitur• I Ap~Uaoctl • "Ml'M r•rnm1'1'e Plano. & C>rfan. 11i0 I Aott-~a I "'--'• Rta. f7" llw S215Jl5 ""4""' ·-Ttrme u 1i1w ., a..54 ..a S:S Hamand 0rpn ON lTDil or -
Apf4uwll4 flwnfNre •Ith laUe ~ ~41'R~ u ....... BM! .. C.M.. Eir.ee cand l'/!i..llOI
Dail>' N , JN Sundl7 BABY Cl"llnd.. Ci¥cTe 8tf'Ctc TRUMPET I C"Uf, looy'1 • sa.. • , 2 yrs okl. ftlm11. alat eoncl. cio1h'na a 10 ' 11. ~
PLACE ,... -1111 ...,. mm. se-21e» " 'Tick •biota. Cooct ~ .._ ....... -D411.1' 'nit __ -n A 11tl11etlon. ~ Put
Pn.Or dW'W ..,.... n. ... =:ii ~::... ~. ec.. Dr •
'
''-I AND TitADI
' ... ........ ..
POOL TA.m.11
TOP NAMESf
PIOla .. m. montb
.Bnmw'k*. Delta. l'ltber.
II mod. Sat. bed. w/ W.
ttme l'lr· BADGER. .,, s ........ Olup 5SOSll
WI 9UY l SELL
•DY ..... .• Gold
An,...aowJ ... 1ry
Al.molt~· TRADES.
C. M. .-.ii A LMft
ml Newport vd., C.M. e ...-rrG e
ii n. BoCpcllnt Refna; Pr.
lt4!P eod l rOad mt.tee ta-
bht: Pr. EQPI: orlr all
PIWhWt. ~ble. SO.
4521
MOVJNG • Spaniab Cabinet
co&t $225. JWt party sell
$100 Mac. Film " brio-a·
brae 109 Iris CdM m.-cne e"" all di)' wkench
• 4 x 4 CEDAR posts 99c. 4 x 8
Part.Ide bd " $2 ,95
F1berllu 5c tt. 3030 Briftol
CM
UPHOlSI'ERING • fl9.50, 2
pc. (European c:nftmlen)
F'tte eit, del. pickup. 2lS
Main, HB "Bern1'' 5J6.&tlXS
AIR Compremor, Hallett: 3
HP. tanll IDOWlted. $210.
1922 P la c e D t la • C.M.
54.')-'ml
KIRBY vacuum c1eaDtt and
attach!D4ft1JI. Balance $51.10
or small P111J11enta. Credit
Dept KE 5-7289, Anaheim.
MATERNITY CLOTHES, a
10, 3 pa1r caprll, ' tape no.
Port-A-Crib no. E1ec 1terb:r
$4. Evu 968-2578
SOFA $75; Lther fruitwcl end
tbla $35 ea, dining tbl &
chest drwrs; 259 Cedar. Nli.
646-049'1
Lo.HEET COOKWARE
For sales & service
Call (213) 348-3483
108-0 THE CLOWN
Children's partiea, Magic
Show, Free Balloons 67S-4.580
FILL DIRT WANTED
Laeuna Bch 10,00> CY.
4~1840
Full-aize Gaa Oven
$3.5.00
548-~
SURFBOARD
ExO!llent condition 9'6"
$50 • 67S-0238
SEAR'S UC Slot car
Kt, $25.
54S-3810
I WANTED
EI LIFT HITCH
for cer. 962-mt
• Misc. Wanted 8610
j WAMTED
I Furnftv,..~nliances
Cofor TV't-;-Stereos -Todls-
531.1212 or 893-0555
(Ask n• Art)
WANTED -CAMPER
SlleU 6xS. st>-2200
I FREE TO YOU •
2 • T WK old klUiem. Weened
and trained to litter box.
One blk. one blk w/orange.
Affectionate. Z15 Tu 1 t 1 n
Ave.. NB. 642-2931 4125
GOOD Home wanted for well
mamered young German
Shepherd -(Mixed)
Medium me -Good watch
dog. 847-9817 4/al
WANTED • Good home f o r
Welch Poodle puppy. Wrtte
900t "'l" Street, Hesperia.
Calif. 4124
5 K1'lTENS, 6% wka old, 4
bt.:k, 1 lorcbalr. l tabby.
Need sood borne. 54&-0179
4/25
BIRD doe male 1 yr shots A
lie. Great !or hantlng or
e at a te guard.
·~ 4/23
2 'BUDDY' kittene to one
home. J..oos lraJred malH,
~ A wtlt. a alt • p.m.
646-'84IXi 4/25
BEAU'?. Kerry . Ter-
rler /Sefmamer Male, 2~
yrs. old; to good bome.
~ 4125
TO $pedal ho ma 11' Pel'Un, ~ si.meee, mitten.
toed ldttml. 12 in a.Jl.
5tM1l3 Wore • p .K. 4125
2 YR. M&le black A 1Uver
~. Ima k ld.,
gentle. 546--0'1'70 att 5
PM 4/25
SMALL~ dog; male;
needl llDced yard. To good
bame. MMm 4IZ
HFAL'l'll'Y, beallt1fol., train-
~ ldntm. Need 1ood -...a..im 4/23
MDCEP ~ Fsm&le. 10
lnOilo Rad moca. MS-1169
attn 5.
BLX A wllt m*-1 PlfL Pill't ............ ~-· 941-614 cm
RA1'1 • all 01bw. male 6
1-aM. ....... a ldt4ta. "'-........ ~
s IW.E ...... wlrl old. sea.-"'22
rain: t ituu .• LI ...., U25
J'RES • -~ . wlD btCp
)'Git ... ~ .,.
FAD Jrm.. 1nl ~. ...... v.:s
PLD'lT " fUI 4lrt. .., to ... et. 80-GTl Cf.ZS .. ....,,.an
'Dil ... ,. 1111
' Tuttdly, Aptll 23, 1'68 D.ULY PILOT Q Ml~ffDtSt Pott TUHSPOITATION TUNSflq_RTA~. N_ ntANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TUNSl'OITATION ' TlANSPORTAfiON TRANSPORTATION , SALi AND TRADI -------Power Cr.,hera 9020 Rtc .... rn Vehld • 9515 lmport4MI Autot 9600 Autot W•nt9d 9700 Used Cara 9900 Used C•rt 9900 UMCI c.,., 9900 .,, -·---............ FREE TO YOU J)' CABIN av.s.. 8uUt in VNlQUtC Dune ~ • POISCHE
--------1 M. S1e4pt f , Hted. Calley. Modf.I •r repUca, ~all 4, n:aw..r (~ .Ba.&iet No q , Bttt .. ~ vw powered. 642-2893
Uowid. 8 )'f'ftfS old. To aood $300. l)Q 60-T7'l3 .i'Nea
home. M4-23n 4125 60-4959 Cempers 9520
CUIHlJAiliJA A lttdtt ~ --------"~" • wkl old. Bledc ,••Ith Sp•MI aJ ~ 9030 'M Dl..X va Ford & camper, ............. ,_ low mUes, 'ooe owner. SU50 • .,...,,...., spofl. 96J· *'?4 ..,...,. Call 64&-1091 ....,....~......;_-----18' WHITE Star wll.96'1 MIXED • 8eq1e pi.wples. Mere. ~ eag.; xlnt cond. '!"::199::::-CHE=::".'v'-T'.Y~~-ton--:pJC"""')(up-. Fr~ to &JIOd b 0 ~ • • • thtuout: trailer & lota ol ex. Cam~r body, slpe f. Xlnt
646-7$1() ~ tru. $1800 Comp 11 t •· cood. ~. 548-192T
CUTE P'lPPies. Dac:hablllld A !i4&--09'J8 , ========-
teJTicll' mixed -call 549-BOOTON WhaJu: 50 hi! Imported .Autot 9600
4006 4123 Mercury, trlr, Co.t Guard
PETS and LIVESTOCK ~ Like JM!W $1500. LA c... 1120
--------lo.It TraJl•rs CUTE Himalayan ldttlu, C·•---------
F. A. fttr. Bluepoint A Seu. 23 foot bolt trailer Brand
• Spot Ca.ah tor Importa
We pay more lor an)' import
regardlesa ol year, make
or cooditi<ln. Try U$ befor.
you sell. ELMORE
MOl'ORS, 9625 G a r d t o
Grove Blvd JE 7-6630
point Male l.Dd fem ah. new t.andml axlea, new '1:50 ===:-:::::====
&t44WS aft 3. ll ~ tl:rea, 68 llcellse, $550. AUSTIN HEALEY
Call Weekdays SAM·SPM --------Dop ms ~ -"~~--~~~~ '62 AUSTIN Healey, wtre
whls., o'drtve, 4 seater; new
Urea, tonneau Ir top; xtnt
cot>d. Financing avail. $1200
GIRMAr:J~EPHERD M.rlne !quip. 9035
AKC ~ Oampioii FOR Sa.le. ~rklna 4-lOT
sLo6r> LINES dJe6el Brand new. never ..;;:::;======== ~3222
l . Ch. ULK WJKINC,. run, $1.900 or best oUer. CORTINA
ER.BUJT Sch m Thoiqu. n4:m-nn or -----
Top wlnnlna Shepherd .:213=:280-8727=-====== C'ORTINA '64, slatlo.o of all Timea 6 Wagon. 39,000. Clean. 2. Cl. NORDRAAK Bo.t Sllp Mooring 903 $800. e 6~ 7304
POR SAL!
Late "S4 SC. white, tan
leather tnte$.ra, all extru .
Porch e ic b • u 1 t system,
~ coocs. Best oUer
ovfll' QJOO. Phone 6n.6519
'00 PORSCHE Cpe 1600 t/h,
black int., new paint. 1\1&
rack. t:Jra & eug. PttfecL
Sta. Take trade, 675-3614
TOYOTA
681/2 TOYOTA
NOW HERE!
Sii THEM TODAY
.,laut LttDiA
• IMPORTS
1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-9303
TOYOTA
HEAOQUAR'tERS
ELMORE
9625 GARD! GROVE BLVD
GARDl':N ~OVE JE ?~30
of MATI'ERHORN WARr lO rent boat allp in
3 times Paciftc area <1 Ba1bos Pavilion Cout Victor
'67 Ford Cortina GT. R&H 4 '66 'IUYOTA Corona 4 Or ..
spd, low mi, warrantee. r/h, w/w, stand. trans.,
Malff..Females (5 weelta) from AIJIU,lt ht to Alli\lst $1795. 89'.2-2642 eves. $1335. Orig. ownr 673-6070
Black A Tan (lhota) lT. 1968. Jarman, P.O. Sox
BRED FOR QUALITY l<m, Salt LW Ot)', Utah DATSUN TRIUMPH
WE.IAY
IOP
l.IJ~i
AND TRUCKS
Any Make .er Model
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2Ht Htrllor llvd.
COSTA MESA
546-1203
IUICK CHEVROLET
'68 BUICK '66 CHEVROlET
Skylatk ~ Door ataUon wag. 4 Door. VS, autorilatic tran. ~n. Racbo, heater, automa-mission, power steerin&, 1'1·
tic, power steering, factory dlo heater factory air QQll•
air condltiontng, pow I! r diti'orun,. •
~~~ power windows. 600 Sl 795 $4195 STANSBURY
FALCON
'62 FALCON Sq, Wag,
like MW
Take okSer trade, dlr, 'I
pymta $31 mo. 491-m3
FORD * Styftsh Compact
'64 FALCON 6, HDTOP SPT.
ORIG.
CPE. A/T, R/H. Beeut..
orig. mellow Ivory w/saddle
bucket teat intft'. Priced lo ao?
ONLY $1095
lst Car Lot on Harbor Blv(l
JOHNSON & SON
STANSBURY BUICK c!:i~co:!~h
BUICK 2100 HARBOR BLVD. 19fl llarbor Blvd'. 64i,7a50
2100 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 646-9022 ======;:;:::
COSTA MESA 646-9022 CLASS !l!MX) d>evy .. .. .. MERCURY *U.S. No. 1 "SPACE"
VEHICLE
'62 CHEV. V-3 "IMPALA"
STATION WA G ON PIG,
Pwr./Steer, R/H, Pwr. R..
Window (10 cubic ft. secret
compartment u n d e r R.
ded<) Sparkling orig. Teal
Blue, w/walls.
ONLY $m!
lat car Lot on Harbor Blvd.
JOHNSON & SON
'68 BRAND new stalioo
wagon. Air, etc .. all serv'
tree for 40,000 miles. Lease
for Sll9 per month. Also
avallabkl: ex c c p t i o n a l
bargains on our lease rum.
ins. Lease Dept. Johnson &
Son Lincoln • Mercury
642--0981
& TEMPERAMENT 84110 -3 ----P!digr~ with each Pup B••t·Y·..Lt '66 DATSUN, 4 spd, t.1r., xlnt TR '58 $200 --------U M8l)5 Days 10-2 PM --n 1hape. $69 de·b or take or make oUer WE PAY • · ·
Uncoln.Mercwy
Costa Mesa Branch
19U Harbor Blvd. 642-1USO
'65 Mere Mont, 4 dr, one
owner, R&H, air, pb, ps,
xlnl cond, Pvt pty, n485
See at 2544 Newprt Blvd
CM
MUSTANG 837.3865 Eves aft 6:30 PM Chartera 9039 trade. P)'mt.s $36 mo. 548-2738 CASH
Weekends 837-3865 a.ft 9 AM »ISENADA race crew 49-1-9773 '67 TRIUMPH Spitfire Red,
BLACK, beige & pure white wanted.. Sbare expense, '68 DATSUN 3pt, PU. dlr, Solt and hard top. :mo mi.
* POPULAR. -HARO TO FINDI
-========;:;11966 CHEVELLE 17..S "MALI·
BU" STATION WAG 0 N.
P/G, Pwr/Steer. R/H. Pwr.
R. wind. etc. "Choice" low
mileage new car trade-in.
Glistening Ermine White w/
plush blue all vinyl inter ..
w/walls.
po o d I e s , m i n • AK c male or female. 548-2592 $69 <!els. or tak<? b:ade. 36 $1995. 646-~
Pedigreed. Pymt.s. S58.86. 4s.t-·q773 '59 TRIUMPH TR.3, low mi.,
• 64>-0a26 or 673--ll33 Mobil. Homes 9200 o~inal owner. Xlnt cond. * DOG TRAINING * FACEL1 VEGA $550. 531-3993
Your veterinarian's choice; $7995.00
all types o! training, guaran-New 24 Wide
teed. 8474914, 49MOOO Two l ath * Two Bedrm
DACHSHUND pups • 3 males BEACH TRLR. SUPPLY
Std. Ii: 1 female, min. 19261 Beach Blvd.
AKC, 2 mos. n4: 673-3513 Huntington Beach $9812
Blk Poodles. Miniatures.
6 wks old. $35 #
54~2713 aft 6 pm.
Cocker Spaniel Puppies
No papers. $20
494-59'l4
BICYCLES 9225
10 Speed Racing Bike
Hardly used
• 675-0238 .
LABRADOR Retriever Pups Mot r clt1 Good breed lines, beau. 0 C'f 9300
1---~~~~~~-marld.ngs. $7.50 ee. 646-8400 67 TRIUMPH nooc
YORKSHIRE Tenier pup-500 cc Ex. Cond. 3,000 mi.
plea. AKC. 494-9937 Spare parts, bell helmet.
'60 F .V. "Classic'' Rare! VOLVO
Xlnt lnvatmt & car to --------restore. Only 26,00> ml.
Rolls int, air. Loaded!
Needs palnt & tires. $1700
or oiler. 494-1701
HILLMAN
'57 HILLMAN, r/h. and '57
VW C011verUble. Botb good
cond1t!on. 673-4086
JAGUAR
'62 JAGUAR XKE $1800. or
$500 & take over pY1Dts.
64&-5102 aft s
1681/2 VOLVO
NOW HERE!
SEE THEM TODAY
~eanLUDiA
• IMPORTS
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303
VOLKSWAGEN
$925 Prlv Pty. 531-8387
Hor .. s 1830 '67 HODAKA 21" front whl.,
REG. QUARTER HOW Ceriania front . &: re~r:
Top yearling tllly; 2 yr. old chrome; $200 lA engine -====-========
gekl.ing, halter wln:ner: 3 yr. work. 642-2909 MERCEDES BENZ
'57 JAGUAR Casale; black;
chrome wire wbeels. Xlnt
condl tion. $800. 54!t-1060 ~
old gelding, top pleasure a FOR Sale. 2 SUzuki's 80 cc.
performance prospect; xlnt. one dirt, one street. A-1
bl'OOd mare, bred to AQHA cond, rea.e. 67>3983
eve1.
champ. gentle to ride. Pric-* 61 HONDA 305 *
e<! from $500. Must sell, '550. See at 2801 ~ da)'a « 540-9525 Europa Ave 546-4504
BEAUT. spotted pony Trailer, Travel 9425
w/saddle & t • ck; well
broken, x.lnt w I s m a I I
children. $125. 962-6722
PRIVATE PARTY has
30 ft Mobile Homa
SHARP, IMMACULATE &.
Boats & Yuhti 9000 ready to roll. Comblnalion
electric .l butane. Take ov·
1937 18' Character bo&t orig-er payment! or wtll trade.
inal abou boat ~ yacbt In-871·3416 after 4 P.M. If no
boa.rdl. 4 eyllndeii universal answer, try a.gain.
'60 MERCEDES
100 SL Coupe. Re-moveable
hardtop, radio, heater, 4
speed transmission.
$2195
EVERYTHING
Starts At
CHICK IVERSON, INC.
1967 VW's •T $1699
Uc. UIS Jtt
1966 VW's
AT
$1499
Uc. SUJ.Jll
tor used cara le truck! just
call ua for free estimate.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask tor Sales Manager
l821l Beach Bl ..
Huntington Beach
Kl 9-3331
Will Buy
Your Volkswagen or Porsche
& pay top doUars. Paid for
or not. Call Ralph
673-1190
OLDER CARS WANTED
Running or not ! SS$$m
• 6.36-2Ul0 •
Used Cars
NEED A CAR?
2 plus 2 fastback. VS engine.
ON LY $19951
Ut Car Lot on Harbor Blvd.
JOHNSON & SON '66 BUICK '66 MUSTANG
Electra 4 Door hardtop. Full Lincoln-Merc.'\Jry radio, heater, automatic
power equipment and fat· Costa Me311 Branch transmlsslon, power steering
tory air conditionill&. Real 19-11 Harbor Blvd. Stl-7000 $1995
llice car. No. P1116 2 Day Special $395
$2695 '59 Chev. 8 Cyl. Sedan, Pow-STANSBURY
erglide, Radio, Heater. Big·
STANSBURY BlgH8:irday Rambler 2100 H!~~~: BLVD.
BUlCK 1969 Harbor Blvd. COST A MESA 646-9022
2100 HARBOR 81.VD. C.OSta Mesa
22 '66 MUSTANG conv. p!I', pb, COST A MESA 646-90 GOTNG into service, must air, auto, R&H, xlot cond,
'40 BUICK LIMITED 43.000 sell. '67 CHEV. SS 39&; Perf irrad present. $1950.
t 1 .1 0 'ginal th model 13817; 8 cyl., 4 speed. 952 7935 ac ua m1 es. r1 . tu-Xlnt cond. 8,000 Ml.; ask. -
out. Needs clutch. $500. or $2600 540-3558 '66 MUST V-8 loaded, r/r,
best oiler. 213: 225-7433 --· -------.,.., dlr, ~.Oll dels or lake trade.
'56 OIEV 2 Dr Nr new 283 W\11 fin bal. 49,-97'13 -----------1 Mtr, 19,~ mi Uph, paint. crrome wheels. $45, easo 1966 SHARP Mustang w/aJr,
642-2539 Eves . Dick pwr, auto, Must sell $1900. CADILLAC
Call 962-8229 aft 3 p.m.
'55 CHEVY sedan delivery ---------• 283, 3 spd, good cond., $325
or best offer. Cao see at lll OLDSMOBILE
45th St., N.B. ---------t
9 PASS Wagon. 1960 Chev, 6 '65 OLDS. Jl6, pb, fac air.
with P/g. ORIG OWNER. Sl49S. S700 below Blue Book. ~ a-es of ultra modem total $395. 675-1502 Xlnl cond. 6 7 5 -511 O • .. ~· 646-80'22
Cadillac facilities designed 1965 CHEVROLET. Bel Air. =========I
to better sell and service 4-dr, auto trans, R/H, !)!>,
new and used Cadillac ante>-one owner. $1750. 546-2080
mobiles.
NABERS COMET
PLYMOUTH
2 Day Special $795
'65 Valiant 2 Dr. No Extru.
But fine condition Economi-* '65 COMET 2 DR. c:a1.
· ONLY $9951 Holiday Rambler elllllne, perfect~ for '66 PROWLER 15': g:is
bay boat. Only one llJte It refrig., sleeps 4-5: like new·
$600. Phone 548-5294 uk for E-Z Lift hitcb. Many ex-
JOf: for demonstration. tras!
STANSBURY
BUICK
2100 HARBOR BLVD.
COST A MESA 646-9022
CAMPIU e POltSCHU
TUNSPORTIU CAN'T BE FINANCED?
e Bankropt? e RepoaesaJon?
,.....--------. e Bad Credit? •Divorced?
Stylish Hi-Thrift six w/ std. 1969 H.ubor Blvd.
2600 HARBOR BLVD. shift economy. Sparkling Cost.a Mesa
COSTA MESA 546-9100 orig. A.l.W!ka white ""./Fiesta -.65--Barr--a-cu"""d-a.-R-/-H-. -a-ut-o,
red, vinyl inter. For the VS. $1500 or best offer. BffiCHCR.A.FT 15'. 35 LONG-___ im __ 54_~_24_77 __ _
SHAFT Evi.nrude. tr.iller. 11' SCADABOUT, sips. 4;
$225. Catalina IMPULSE. equip. w I stove, sink, \ce-
962--96i7 box & side attachable tent.
M 0 0 RE A M A IDEN Used once! ~l
Character boet 31' Moo-1967 17' AIR float. like new.
terey SS $4000 W a 1 t Sleepc 8. Sacri.tlce Sl.275.
j.11-5756 aft 5 2519 Bowdoin, CM
Or;inge .. County·~
L a rqest Sel1>chon
Nnw & U·,f'd
Mt!• u·tl<>s B<'n z
Jim Siemon~ Imps.
W Mne r & M.1in St MUST sell • Oanl&h dlnet•"
1et, $lk). Dble bed Ir bdbrJ Trucks • 11 Sant,1 An.1 546 4114
~· Mile i~ems. Aft 5. ---------,58-MERCl!D---,ES-Bem--190-SL-
642-4243 ~tr. BcJge w I b e 1 g e
15' FIBERGLASS boa 1 Inter. Oloc. top. Sharp!
w/!lteerlng and controls. $1750. 673-7334
$350. See to 1&>1>reiclatt.
962-99'lr
14 FOOi' "GALAXY"
Aluminum boat, trailer and
motor. $200. 962-7057
SailbCNlts 9010 DEMONSTRATOR
LIKE SAILING?
DISLIKE THESE? 1967 GMC %-TON
MG
'52 MG TD ''Clau1c" Restrd.
Xlnt mech & rung cond, Br.
Rae Gm, nu uphl, rad, $950
Pvt pty 613--04.16 ----'€3 MG Midget ret>Jt. dlr.
e Payment.I, hlih inlmlt,
depredation, allp rental•,
cleanlnf, iillurance, etc.
eng. $~ dels $3o me. Take
trade. 494-9773 Camper Cruiser Pickup truck -------,.--Automatic transmission, ra-'64 MGB. Wlre wlleels, R&H,
dlo and beater, power 1teer-new tttes. $1200.
PREFER nIESE7?
• Low cost, no work
Care free aailmg bl a oo 25, u wtie u m.
lnl. beevy duty rubber. 494-4331
a day, avail aoon Cal 34.
$3195
STANSBURY
iUICK Try Our Club Plan
NEWPORT SAILING CLUB
615-0110 2100 HARBOR Bl VD.
38' YAWL: oacroo Aili. COSTA MESA 646-9022
Greynwioe aux, slpe 6. 196.l CHEV PU. 6 c:yl., 8'
galley, bead. comp! equip, b e d • ~ a d I o , h e 1 t e r .
new pat !'. haul out. Mu.'lt overdrive. S625 (wholesale
aell. Alldng ~. 847-8.167 price). Mf-2'77 alter 6 PM
CXJLUMBIA 29 Maril ll. '6'7.
~1 ~.custom ex·
Ins, llpe 6, botaDe cooldng.
dinette, encl bead, 30 hp
aux.. $13, 900. 613-'1629
) .
OPEL
'67 OPEl
Station wqon. R.tcMo and
better.
$1695
SfANSBURY
BUICK
2100 HAllOI aLvo.
COST A MESA 646-'°22
NOWS THE
TIMI FOi
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WAtlf AD
1'62 VW 6 PASS.
PICKUP INC. CAMPH
$1099
Why Don't You Start
Living Today At
o~,~so~
~,t,
549·0303 -671°1190
1f7t llAl!101l ILVO, COSTA MIU
•Military •New ID Area?
Maki' Payday Payments
McCARTHY MOTORS
1420 So. Mafo & Ed111gcr
(2 blocks N. of Sean)
Santa Ana Pb 542-3507
Drastic Car Sale
TOO MANY CARS!
WUl take anything of value
in trade. Sale starts today.
Most makes & models.
Pay.Day Payment plan. Dir.
1020'l Westminster Ave.
!17th St,) W. Santa Ana
636-1880
prompt to act! 646-3400 alt 5: 30
1st Car Loi on Harbor Blvrl.
'62 CADILLAC
JOHNSON & SON
Lincoln· Mercury
Costa Mesa Branch
1941 II arbor Blvd. 642-7000
CONTINENTAL
1964 LANDAU. El<Ceptlonel
Convertible. Wblte wltb red cond. Blk Jthr, loaded. S2350
interior, full power equip. make offer. 673-7629
ment and factory air condl·I==========::.
tioning. COUGAR
PONTIAC
ROY CARVER
PONTIAC
-~ BJ., o.t.a JI-Kl 6-4444
Oranre Coet7'1 1::a1911,..
Dealer tar Rolla • ~ aJld
Bently.
1965 Pontiac Catalina Ven•
lura 4 Spd, i;tlck thl!t, $1495 '67 COUGAR, like new·, 9,00> original miles &: owner. Like new condition. Must
'67 SEO. ~hite, bit. lnl. ra-BUICK
dio, fittPd cover, ski rack, --------
STANSBURY Mi.. auto. trans., R/H, sell. sacrifice! 962-8229
pwr. steer.: many ex1rae. BUICK $2875. Call Mon. 673-7085 '61 CATALINA Sta Wag, 6
cbnJns, xlnt rond, 9 mo .
9700 M1 $16!!5. 67$-1166 Jim.
MY loss your gain!
Good, dran '62 VW, S895
Cash. 546-2934
'66 VW 1300 Deluxe. new
paint. 18.000 mi, $1495.
968-2513
'59 VW. new eng.. 3.000
miles. $695. uavini 11Ate.
Xlnt cood 546-1600 Evee.
'61 VW Xlnt cond, new pnt -
Urea. R.&H. Some cnah &
pmnts. Pvt pty 548-4286
'66 vw Bug, red w/wht mt.
Well ca.red for. Xlot cond.
$1395. ~
1960 VW, good cond, S490
tlrm. 195..12 Trenton Lane
962-0C>R3 all 5 PM
'66 VW. Bug Excel cmd, all emu. $1350
~aft6 PM.
Sf!rt C1rs 9610
68 'h MG
NOW HElll
SH THEM TODAY
~-LIJDiA
• IMPORTS
1986 Harbor, C.M. ...,.,
2 Day Special $995
'8' Trtwnph RoedNr. Spit· are. Holld.ly R•mWer
19119 Harbor Blvd.
a.ta*-
Whit. El.. .,
Dtnur •a • U..
'
'64 BUKK
RJviera. F'ul! ~ equll>'
ment and factory a.Ir con·
dltlonlng.
$1995
STANSBURY
BUICK
2100 HAR.BOR BLVD.
COST A MESA 646-9022
'6' IUICI
68 BRAND N Cou pass, auto. ps, pb, R&.H, 2100 HARBOR BLVD. ' · ew. gar $611.i. 546-8594
COST A MESA 646-9022 IP.a.se for $89.oo per mo. ========-1 Johnson & Son. 642--0981
'62 CAD El Dorado Convt. ======== RAMBLER White w/roo leather int.
Full pwr, rac1 air, low ml. 2 Day Special $895
Well cared for. $1450. or--------'6.'J Rambler American Hani-
best ot!er. Call Jerry Star 2 Day Special $795 top, Overdl:rve, Radio, Heat.
TV 642-9742, 9AM to 6 PM '64 Corvalr Coupe. Original er, SHARP.
CORVAIR
'62 CADILLAC s e d a n . Holiday Rambler Holiday Rambt.r
Desperale, $1100. Mike of. 1969 Harbor Blvd. 1969 Harbor Blvd.
fer. SU---O'.l69 or e v e s C.Osta Mesa C.Osta Mesa
646-10« 1963 CORVAffi 2 Day Special $895
'66 Coupe de Ville, all extraa, Like new! Hou!Je of 01ain, 4 S~ Station Wagon, Shaz1>
padded roof. stereo radlo. 517 w. 19th, C.M. 548-l4S4 Holiday Rembler
$4400. 675-1465 '62 MONZA, r/h. <'ir. auto. J969 Harbor Blvd.
---xlnl cond. $25 d<>'5 pymts Cost.a Mesa
__ C_H_EV __ R_O_L_n __ ·srnl·MmoON ... ~94. ~9drr.:l, 1tuto, n•.11, -.6-1 _R.A_MB_, -LE-R---Cl-ean-. -Stl-clt
'65 OIEVROlfT
""' """ shift, good tires $ 3 5 O. air. Must R.ll, lm or oUer. 5.'MHi88!)
646-5108 ========.I
CORVmE T·llRD
'67 CONVERT .• 4'111390 HP. * "Distinctive"
4 ipd., po 1 i . t r 1 c t I o · 1962 TJfUNDERBIJU) per.
AM/FM: y<>Uow; white soma! luxury car w/tartory
top, white tn ter. 10.00> ml. AIR CONDmONING and
$3.595. 673-07'/S After 6 PM all !he space age powu
Wcekdaya tras! &.lut. orl.f. Arctic
BeWr 4 Door. Radio, h@lter, w/tmmac. ~all
automAUc ~. DODGE yl .trato ~ In~. •u
powier ·~· the better llfe" tor -
D«ln f Door ae<Wi. R.adk>. $1295 llt Wagon Buy ONLY $11951
beater, aU10t'Mdc, lbU pow· '6' Dodlt 3 Nlnt P.....-. lit OU-Lot on~ Btvilt.
• IQW~t. STANSIURY A.Lr Condldcnecl. P ower JOHNSON & SON $1295 Steerll\I, Auto. Shtft, ~lo. ~ . IUICK a.ter. SU95. Cost.a Mae Bruch STANUURY 2100 HARBOR llVD. HoHdey Rambi.r llH1 Hartior Blvd. ec. COST A MESA 644-9022 1969 Harbor Blvd. IUICK a.ta M~ 1988 Nird, lull TJWf, JJ52 OU"VY II We~. Au•\ t.pe, Sac.TU $281». See at
2100 HARBOR ILVD. tint <!OM. ~.ooo mt, orla '64 DOOGE Out GT 2 dr. 1517 P 1 act n tl a, Na.
· COST A MlSA 646.9022 ownr-r. rm. 5 4 6 -t 5 5 9, ~ bod)' blade A wbite 548-30U ~ aft t
IOIM .. ..,..... • a.. 54&-5145 tnt, budret MUI. RIH. 'C SPORTS RAidJitu, wire
DAILY Jl'IU7I' WAlft Miii .101N a.. w_.. ~ a. W15 ............... Ot-3231 wbtell, air coot., ete. «<-
NMm DAJLY PD.or """' Al:llt awu;m m cellent cond,JUSO. 875-1~
~
•. .... r ,, <rt I ' ... ,, .. ,. . . -..... "-. .. . .. -. ,.
DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
Star Chamber Justice?
Protests against action by the American Bar Assoc•·
ntion to censor p~tr1al crime information at 1l3 source
have been repeatedly voiced in the nation's press and on
the air.
Despite widespread discussion. then: arc still indl·
cations that many people think it's all just a dlspute be-
tween lawyers and editors. The point appears lost that
the press merefy represents the public in attempting to
protect the public's right to know what Its servants in
courts and police departments are up lo.
Secret police and legaJ proceedings h1stor1call y have
been the tools of despots Even today, in America. there
could be a return lo the star chamber and an invitation
to corruption, w1lh justice meted out by secret arran~
menl.
The best preventive in a democratic society 15 full
disclosure so that public opin!on may be formed on a
solid base of information. And so th is opinion may be
expressed intelligently in support of law and ordf'r and
equally in defense of the rights of one wrongfully ac-
cused.
Incidents of pre·trial publicity about the accused af-
fecting adversely his right to a fair trial have been ex-
tremely r<l1°e -and there have been remedies in hig~r
rourts where this has occurred. And for every such in-
cident there have bttn hundreds in which run disclosure
o{ facts developed by the police and press has aided jus-
ti~.
The legal proression, unable to police conduct m
it.~ own members, is now fostering a move which woufd
tlearly inhibit -the news mi!dia from reporting fully to
the public the fact6 or crime and law enforcement. Action
b,v the AnK!rican Bar Association is not binding on state
biir groups. Until the state groups adopt the proPOsal.
It is not really binding. The California Bar Association
has emphatically stated that it tras not adopted t~ ABA
proposal.
Fortunately. a considerable body of opinion within
the legal profession opposes the ABA position -and
lik.eJy will oppose it all the mori! once there has been
reflection on the contradictory position taken this month
Questions We
Might Ponder
Pondering• and Perplexities:
-Why is it that the people wbo say
"It goes without saying" never go
without saying it?
-Why is it that we talk about the
"dead past" when we want to ignore
some parallel with today's problems,
but about "the lessons of history"
when we want to make some dramatic
comparison?
-Wh y Is it that we al ways say
"reiterate" when "iterate" would be
enough?
-Why it il that the phrase · gracious
Uviog" seems ao ungracious to those
who can't afford it?
-WHY JS IT THAT so many
parents expect little children to .. listen
to reason." when the age of reason
doesn't begin until at least 7. isn't fully
developed until 18. and in many cases
remains passive for a UfeUme ?
-Why do we still disparagingly
refer to an idealistic plan as "Uto-
pian," when virtually everything in the
Utopian schemes of the past has been
achieved or exceeded. beyond the
wildest dreams or their founders?
-Why ts It that the speakers who
"need n? introduction" are genrrally
;::1ven the longest and dullest one~"
-Wiw 1<; it th3t a man "ho would hr
lhf' firsl to admit that he as involv<'d an
;1 rat.;·zc.:~" would be thf' hr~t to
resent being termed a "rat"?
..
-WHY IS IT THAT people who
refer lo themselves as "generous to a
fa ult'' imagine that their generosity
makes up for their other faults?
-Why is it that when a person triei;
to emphasize a sentence with the word
"literally," he almost always means
"not literally''?
-Why is It that whenever a man
says to me. "I agree with you in prin·
ciple." it is clear that he Is gomg to go
against his principles
-Why is ii th.at we "upbraid" others
in reproving them. instead o f
• • d o w n b r a i d i n g ' ' ? And why
''shortcomings.'' but no "longcom-
ings"?
-Why is it that speakers or writers
who want to sound impressive use the
word "fruition'' -which has nothing
to do with "coming to fruit." but pro-
perly refers lo enjoyment rather than
maturity~
-Why is it that we laugh at the
delicate e u p h e m i s m of our
_grandoarents havi ng called a le~ a
· limb" and a bosom a "chest" -
when we follow the mod ern custom or
refemne. to 1lhc1t sex relations as an
.. affair?"
Hubert Decides to Run
It 's time for another chapter in that
nostalgic series. "Where Are The)
Now?"
Yes. where are the greats of vester-
year" Where are those who slePPf>rl
from the ~!are of lame and re-nown to
~"l'k happine!ls in humble obscurity ~
Where. in brief. 1s Hubert Horatio
Whatshisname.,
Well. it will tug at the heartstrin1ts
or Hubert's millions of old-time fans to
hear that he is alive and in
Washjngton. Moreover. tie tells the
rare visitor who searches him out in
his qujet little Georgetown apartment
that he as glad he renounced his role
a.; the Nation's Fighting Liberal for
the humble obscurity of the V1ce
Presidency.
"Glad," he Is lond of saying. his
vc1ce rising. "glad, Glad. GLAD!"
But It Is a new Hubert today who
sits with his lovely wife, Muriel. at
the breakfast table beneath the tatted
motto on the wall : "Be It Ever So
Humble. There'' No Place Like the
Vice Presidency."
H BERT : I have decided to lake on
a new challenge.
Mane!: Oh. I'm i10 glad dear. J'v!'
alwas said that since you retl~
from active pollti~. you shoo.Id take
up a hobby. Wbat'a It going to be,
ships in bottles~
Bw Geof'9e ---.
Dur George :
.;omethlna puu.lu and annoys
me . You advice columnnu
presume to t.eU peoptt bow to
solve tbcir Pfob!ems. aod you
Mt )'OW'Mlvtt I.Ip U all·lmowillt
aeers. You advise people bow
to handle lhelr lives. bow to
lnVttt. what to do wtth their
leisure and even prea1U1'1e to
1ptd: out on ttlelr at~ We, ti'
JOG 1dvic• t"olu:mnl1t.s are so ,o • ._.... why ar .. you trortin&
for• Uvinf?
ANNOYED
worU
\ ..
Hubert· No. 1 thank I've decided tu
run for President.
Muriel I deli~htt>rlly): T h a t.; s
wonderful. dear 1 Just think of how the
millions of old-time Liberals who've
always worshiped you will rall y to
your banner. Has the ADA endorsed
you~
Hubert: Not t>xadly. but I'll J:<'I
heavy financial backing from in-
dustrialists in the Pres1denrs Club
Muriel: And after your life-Ion~
fight for civil rights. you can count on
the NAACP to help get the nomination.
Hubert: Well. actually, I'm countinii
more on a coaUt1on of Southern
Governors.
Murtel: Then there's labor's rank
and file . Surely they'll join your long-
time crusade against those fat. cigar-
C'hawing union bosses.
Hubert: Please . you're talking about
my dlief supporter . ~orge Mean y.
But the Prtsident called ...
Martel: That's twice this year 1 Did
he endoue you'
Hubert I frownin~l : Nol exactly. But
he did say I wu a keen Vite Presi-
dent. In fact. he Implied I wu a
natUJ"al born Vice President.
Martel: Tha.t's nice dear. But I only
worry that aftlor all these vears of
retirement. peoplt won't remember
wtiat a ueat F'ighUna Uberal you
were. •
B•bert rctumty)· That's odd. In
trying to put together a coalition of in·
dustJ'iali3lS. SouthemeN and union
bosses. I only~ that they will.
Mariel: Well. J m proud af you.
dear. Alter all these years ol humbly
~I orders. at t..t you can be YOW'
own man again.
Habt>rt lthrutttna forth hlll jaw\:
Yts, that's Oflf' f!f two ~ason.s I thlrtk
l'v• dttldtd to tab thb momen.b>us
ltep.
Mutrl: Wht's the other dur?
lhal9trt lpott111 at blt e111 with hi.I '°'*': 'nlt Pr d«lt MY• J line to.
• .,,.,, ~· i _,_-.,. .............. _ .... ·-. . .
by ABA President Earl F. Moma.
Curiously. Morris argtJet that the standards adopt·
ed by the ABA "do not impose any restrictions on the
news media lhemseJves; they apply only to lawyers,
Judges and law enforcement officers."
He said the objective of the guidelines was "to
eliminate al its source the relea~ of information by
lawyers and law enforcement officials that may prejudice
fair lriaf. without preventing the news media from re·
porting full y to the public the facts of cnme and law
enforcement "
Just how Morris goes about squaring "eliminate at
its source the release of information" with the phrase.
•·without preventing the news media from reportin~
fully" would be interesting to observe. To put the censor-
ship. of public information into the hands of lawyers or
police officers is a move backward toward star chamber
"justice '' To their credit, most police have opposed the
ASA nroposal as harmful to law and order.
The long-running debat.P on this ha" been wronJ?IY
labeled, "free Press vs. f air TriaJ." More accuratefv.
with both ri i!?lts protected under t~ Constitution. 'it
;;hould be labeled, "Free Press ANO Fair Tr~I " Or
better still. ''A Fully Informed Public and Fair Trial."
Su rely fairness in the court! will be in jenoardv
wheMver the public's servaMA are freed from tbe de.,.
lerrent to wrongdoing provided by lhe ilrummation of
free, unC'ensored N'porting.
Hippies .and Happiness
It appears Orange Coast residents roncern:?d about
an innux of hippies can take some hope.
Dr Alfred Au erback. a psychiatrist at UC-San fran-
~1s~o ~e<!ical Center. believes the rebellious teen-ager
1c;n t Ctndmli! any more happiness as a hippie than he
found el:;~where. so the movement will soon disappear.
And Just as surely, another movement with different
affectations will take its pface.
Not .Enough
Police for
Denmark'• Pornography Law
Riot Control
WASHrNGTON -In Martin Luther
K ing·~ last published appeal to the
conscience of men he wrote :
"I am convinced that if noting con-
tinues. it will strengthen the right
wing of the country and we'll end up
with a kind of right-wing takeover In
the cities and a Fascist devek>pment
which wilt be terribly injurious to lbe
whole nation."
The magazine article in which Dr.
King expressed this belief was on the
newsstands when be was murdered. ll
,.. ·» • •;J . .:.<. ·:t:JI.)'.;' ~ ~ I , r-.. • ~--• ,~ • • .. " •
. . i ... ~5: . ~.lfl·~.. , ...... ~ . ..:
was as 1f he had foreseen the violt>nl
aftermath of his own death and the
rising reaction against that rioting
which now expresses itself In the
shoot-to·kill doctrine of Mayor Ri chard
Daley of Chicago.
NOT MANY OF THE nation's
mayors are willinll( lo admit that they
agree with Mayor Darey for the simple
reason th<t to shoot lo kill 15 or 16-
year-old boys th rowing M o I o t o v
cocktails ohend" the innate sc•nse or
what i, a proper response an !hr
c1rcum .tanl'r'
There 1s something badlv wroni.:
with h: 'h .\! yor Daley's rc,non~r an I
Dr l\in~·s forecast. U insistence on
public nrdcr an riotous situations 1s to
be con i;1dered f'ascht or right winJl.
and thus to be avoided, citv authorities
are helpless •
If shootin1Ho·maim young girls run-
ning off with loot from a supermarket
ls cons1drrec1 to be the proper
response then Atty. Gen. Ramsey
Clark as probably right that "a very
dangerous escalation" of racia l violen-
ce "ould follow
TllE ANSWt:R WILL ha ve to Ile
i;omewhere bet ween these extremes.
an<! 1t is to be found an Dr Kini;:'s ad-
d1t1 onal words: "I plan to stand by
nonviolence because I have found it to
be a philosophy of lire that rei~ulates
not onl y my dealln~s in lht' stru~fi!le
for racial JUSllce. but also my d<'alinl!s
with people. with my own self I wtU
still be 'faithful to nonviolence."
This ts not much o< an answer.
however for those merchants who
watch their goods camed off and th<'tr
stores go up in names because the
pohl'e are powerless to l' h P <' k
wholesale looting. Police lack of
power. however. may not tar in
restraints on flrlng their weapons It
mt1y lie simply in the fact that the
police are too few in numbers to hold
under control the large areas of cities
which may fall under riotous con·
dJtions
rF TH.f.RE IS ANY answer lo !hat
problem 1t i5 many, many morr and
better trained police. and this 1s a fact
which cities wtth high crime rates and
unruly populations w11l have to race
sooner or l&ter regardless of cost and rising tax rates.
The presence of 14.000 federal trnops
brought the looUnR and bur11ing ln
Washington under control. and It was
not ~ lo lma.gine for a few ni~bta
on the deserted and patrolled strtt~
Of the city that one WM Uvin1 in a
Faac:lst state -a Fascist state
created not by Fascistl but by 1111· controlled looters and burMrs.
The maulve federal presence in
Waahlnrton la not so quicld,y eva!lable
In other cltiu and t\len in Washlnitton
thne ls crltJctsm that this force wu
!nvtilvcd too slowly. Certalnly in the
mh.lal staffi ot !noting, burn1ng end
riotfrla tht rHpon~lbWty lit• with the
local police. amt lhey are lnadtqultt
In numbttl and tninin1 in most cttlea
to brln1 rnau dl..torder qukkly und9t
mi lJ'1) l.
J
Legality Lessens Interest
To the Editor:
It's lhe same old story : tell the peo-
ple they can't have something and
they will break their necks trying to
get it. Let them have it freely. W1th no
penalty, and right away they Jose in-
te1·est. Histo ry proves 1t In the begin·
ning the Lord forbade Adam and Eve
lo partake of the forbidden fruit. and
now, i1 you please, look at the popula-
Uon explosion!
THE DANISH government recently
passed a law permitting the sale of
pornographic boo ks. As a result of
such "way out" legislation, the sate of
hot books in Denmark has dropped to
a new low. and-glory be! -the num-
ber of sex crimes Ill r a p 1 d t y
dlminishing, according to I h e
Intelligence Report in • Paradr"
magazine. It appears now that the
s mut pe"1dlers in Denmark are hard
put to make a profit.
I RECALL THE painting "Sep-
tember Morn" which appeared in
Ameri~ about 55 years ago. It
portrayed. and with good taste. a
young nude woman standing in a lake.
It wao; parliaJly a si:ie view. and the
parts most ob1ected to by prudes were
subdued. 1 ht> whole thing was a work
of art. But the literature of that era
disc'oscs th:il the printers of "Sep-
tember Morn" were almost bankrupt
until an alert promoter persuaded a
prominent church to ban the pictun
and declare it obscene. From tben on
the sales skyrocketed.
IT'S THE SAME old story; only it is
too bad that America continues to be a
victim of taboos that are >aoghed at in
many foreign countries that are
receiving our aid. taboos that are
merely helping to make the smut ped-
dlers here rich wh ile deceiving the
rest of the people. We could learn
mucb !rom little Denm ark.
MILT BASHAM
Helped Rbmell
To the Editor:
I have just read the letter Crom
David Ross 1 Mailbox, Apnl 18). He in-
dicates David Davin (Mailbox. April
12) does not underst<1nd Negro unrest.
Mr. Ross says he lived near a ghetto
and later collec:ed billJ Crom "the
deadbeats In the ghetto."
First let me say that r agree with
Mr. Davin concerning the assassina·
tion Qf Martin Luther KJng. His kind
alw.ays breed t r o u b I e . His
"associates" used stolen cars. He
bJm.elf attt!n<led numerO\Js Com-
muni.M meetings. Photos taken or him
at these meetings bave been publ!Jbed
In numerous publications.
BAa TO David Ross' lettM' Let's
look at my uperlence with the
deadbeat Negro. Only a small number
of them really want to work lo raise
Dear
. Gloomv " Gus:
Ren 1.1 advice to thoae who
U'I• trouble .Uckln1 the FOJl
,t1-eent 1tamp: Mol.sten ~ tn-
ft)Opt instead or the stamp -
U taste-I better. and the stamp
jtfcb,
-R. J. W. ,.. ........... _,,. ..... -__ ,,., ...... --.-w .....
~--.. ...., ............
themselves above collecting weUare.
Those sh-Ould be commended.
I lived on welfare for years in a not-
so-hol part of town. I worked alongside
numerous Negroes. I went to high
school with about 400 of them. But I
don't live near them now. I don't
because I worked. went to school when
I couJd and did so with the idea of get-
ting out of the slums.
NOW I HA VE ttae following · 1. Six
years in the U. S. Air Force; 2. five
years on the same job making a good
salary ; 3. two years of college: 4. a
fam ily and a nice-aiie home. It was
hard . especially fjnishing high school,
but 1t was all worth it.
Mr. Ross did not Uve. go to school
and work with the Negro. He only col-
lected their payments So T don't feel
he can say whether or not their pro-
blems are understood. II l sound like
J'm patting mysell on my back. well, I
am. because I helped myseU.
The first person who will help some·
one is himself. Help yoursell and
the rest comes easy. lf the Negro
believed that, maybe be would un-
derstand his own problems.
PATRICK BONNER
Skha Color
To the Editor·
Regardless of the complafots. the
public NEEDS massive doses of
education on th'e subject of prejudice.
We cannot look the other way any
longer. The color of one's ski n simply
does not make one better or ~rse
than his neighbors.
What with working and laking care
of my family, 11 1s hard to write and
talk as much as I would Like on this.
However, I talk and write as much as
possible.
M. TROY
TNJf 1'c J'Utn
To the Editor:
Recently I attended the traffic
school at the request oC the court due
to a traffic vio~Uon.
'l'he Inspector showed a film that
vividly depicted tbe dead and the
dyihg .. l'esulta of traffic violations.
The rum wu vuy impresslvt. t am
sU'1'e tbat It will accomplish what fines
will not. I knOw Ulat thl.s Is true in my
own case.
I WA.S .EXTREMELY disturbed at
the .audlent!e reaction to tbe f.ilro,
Some slept through ll, ot:hm liflled.,
Quotes
Gn. Rapa -"n. OflfJIO'banity
for bullna1 at enpge ln aodal action
is the most needed and challengtng
ta sic before ua today."
Prulddt Pndt .. IMI F;. Mareos of
the P1lltlppfaet, •• ..._ wouW UP9t-•
If t.e.e V.8. nl U.1 ""'" dlelr troops wt el Vlelum: ''I ein,IUl'e the
momlnt Vittum falla to the Com-
mnnl.U. thu ls the ~ Of war
all over Alia.''
Melvta Belll. Sea Praltdaco laWJer,
oa nCll Nb: "To c:aJJ for riotini as
eueatlal to UM ettabUlhment of an ln·
dMctual'a r1pt.s la llle dyna.mJUna the
whole piMtry to ~ a liDgt. J• ol
peachu."
many speeded away in their cars,
several people said that 1t was
disgusting that such a film would be
shown that made them sick. Tiley
claimed that they had had enough
violence.
Since I think it can be safely sssum·
ed that we were all there for tht same
reason. a traffic violation. I trunk that
the film was excellent. I too, have had
enough of violence, and this film may
be an excellent way of cutting down
the violence on our roadways.
LURA REED
ll•e Se_,_ t: .. .,.a.pe
To the Editor:
Is there anything that can be done to
stop teachers from sending coupon1.
tickets and invitations home with their
students? r have one five-year-old daughter in
kindergarten. She gets home from
scllOOJ at 2 p.m. and an aft«noon
babysitter takes care oC her untll we
arrive bo~ .from work. My husband
is an electronics engineer and I own a
beauty parlor. We just don't have the
time during the week to drop our work
and business to take her to all of Ulese
affairs.
THE TICKET she brought home
recently was for a circus which was
held at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. at the
fairgrounds. We couldn't take her dur·
ing the afternoon and she tearfully
argued that all tbe olh« kids were
goi ng and that I never take her any
place Ulat the teacher tells her to go ! I
told her &be could go that evening with
the babysitter and the babysitter'•
mottler aod I would pay for the
tickets. Adult fare was $2 each and it
cost 111e s.5 for admission and popcorn.
Th•t wasn't bad, but the circus started
at 8 p.m. and sbe dMn't get home until
10:30 on a Thursday night end ahe had
to go to school the next morning!
THIS IS J UST one of many inci<leflts
which have occurred since she started
school last September. Anothe!' WaiJ a
''Mot.her-Daughter Fashioo T e a • •
which was held in the middle Of the
afternoon. and in order for the
daughter to be in the fashi0'1 show, she
had lo we.ay something made by the
mother. Wbo has Ume lo sew wben
you are trying to n.in a buslntss, a
house. be a wife and a parent!
More power to the women who find
time to attend and belp at these func-
t.lon1, but there Ke rnany of ua In the
business and proJenional field who
almply can't.
May I suggest & solution to this pro-
blem: Teachers shoo.ld send any
coupon, ticket or fovitation home in a
ua.Jed tn\1elope. I would a~all
the elimiutlOll ol te&l'I a n d
ariumeota.
MRS. SHARON LURA